So why was he walking toward it?
Why was he following those bloody footprints back to their source?
He wanted to stop but didn’t.
Couldn’t.
The interior of the bathroom swung into view, and he tried to look away, knowing he should just turn off the flashlight, spare himself from seeing this scene again. The images from before had already left an indelible mark. The kind of imprint that would never leave.
But he was already standing in the doorway.
He steadied the light.
The pool of blood where the man had once sat was empty and beginning to congeal imperfectly, like a cracked mirror, black in the feeble illumination of his light.
Don was gone, a sudden confluence of terror and relief flooding through him at the possibility that Don might still be alive.
Grant stepped into the bathroom and crouched down at the edge of the dark puddle.
Passed the light over it.
That’s not right, is it?
If Don had somehow gotten up or been moved, the blood would have smeared.
And let’s be honest—that is a shit-ton of blood.
Grant stood and traced the floor from the puddle to the doorway with his light. Just the one set of footprints from before—Jude’s.
He put his light on the shower curtain.
A prickling sensation dropped down the length of his spine.
Had it been open earlier?
He thought back to his first time in this bathroom, but he couldn’t recover the detail. He’d been too focused on his friend.
Grant cocked the flashlight back like a baton as he turned toward the bathtub.
No sound came from behind the curtain.
He stepped forward onto a blood-free section of tile, reached out, caught a fold of fabric between his thumb and forefinger.
He ripped it back.
An empty tub.
The bunched muscles in his shoulders relaxed, but an explosion of footsteps out in the corridor spun him around.
He stepped over the blood, bolted out of the bathroom, and shot through the bedroom toward the open door.
The footsteps pounded down the staircase, shaking the house.
Grant sprinted through the hall above the foyer, screaming his sister’s name, screaming for her to wake up.
When he turned the corner, he stopped.
Paige’s bedroom door was open.
Blackness inside like he’d never seen.
He felt the mysterious pull.
The rush of air behind him.
He needed his legs to work, to propel him in the opposite direction, but they’d gone lame, and now his knees failed him too.
He was sinking down onto the floor as the room sucked him in, but it wasn’t just a physical undertow. He was suddenly aware of something lurking on the outskirts of his consciousness. A concentrated intellect studying the framework of his mind. Searching for a way in. The intensity of its attention like a furnace.
Grant sat up on the living room couch.
His chest billowing.
It took him a moment to recalibrate.
The fire had gone out and the room was freezing.
He reached down and felt for Paige, found her back.
It rose and fell with the unhurried pace of a deep and restful sleep.
Bittersweet reality.
He lay back down and drew the covers up to his neck. The pillow was soaked in sweat and so was he.
Waking up from that nightmare into this one was a small relief, but he’d take it.
He’d take it wherever he could find it.
His pulse rate was falling back toward baseline, and sleep was creeping up on him again like a welcome predator.
No more dreams.
As if he could will such a thing away.
Grant closed his eyes, and they had been shut for less than a second when a sound like a gunshot filled the house.
His eyes opened.
He didn’t move because he couldn’t.
Frozen with liquid fear.
He stared into the ashen bed of coals beneath the grate, glowing the same subdued color as the brownish-purple dawnlight that was filtering in through the windows.
His heart banged inside his chest with a relentless fury, and he was on the borderline of hyperventilation, his vision sparkling with pulsating specks of black.
That sound.
He knew exactly what it was.
The door to Paige’s room had just slammed shut.
Chapter 16
You’ve reached Grant Moreton. I can’t get to the phone right now, but if you’ll—
Sophie Benington shelved the handset.
Her sergeant, Joseph Wanger, walked over, looking every bit like the terrifying slob he was—big and broad, his white, button-down oxford hanging out of his waistband, his collar stained with duck sauce the color of radioactivity.
He was tearing through a carton of Chinese food from Grant’s second favorite restaurant in the world—the Northgate Panda Express.
When he reached her desk, he rapped his knuckles on the particleboard.
Sophie shook her head.
Wanger sighed heavily and stabbed a plastic fork into the carton.
The rippled surface of his shaved head was sweating from the handful of hot mustard packets he’d undoubtedly squeezed onto his meal.
“I’ve been calling him all morning,” Sophie said. “It rings, but he’s not picking up.”
“You guys are close, right?” His voice pure gravitas and boom. Sophie had seen it break more than a handful suspects, blundering unis who’d muddied the chain of evidence, and even the occasional detective.
“I don’t know if I’d say—”
“Come on, Benington. What’s going on with your boy?”
“I don’t know.”
“But you do know Grant’s got a taste for scotch. I mean, that don’t require any sort of special training to deduce.”
“I’m aware, sir.”
“He’s been fine the last year or two, but he’s has not always been the straight and narrow. Any chance he’s going through a thirsty spell, and you just don’t have the heart to rat him out? It’s not a part of your job to protect him, you know.”
“I’m not protecting him.”
Wanger shoveled a pile of lo mein noodles into his mouth, his massive black mustache glistening with MSG.
“Look, I’ve known Grant for two years,” Sophie said. “He’s shown up for work hung-over a few times.”
“A few?”
“A few times a week. Rolled in still drunk once or twice. But he’s never not shown up.”
“Boy could be going through some shit not on your radar.”
“I don’t think so.”
“So you guys are all cuddly then?”
She imagined lifting the paperweight off her desk—a viceroy butterfly enclosed in a clear globe—and smashing it into Wanger’s ball sack.
“No, but I do sit across from the man every day. I wouldn’t be a good detective if I couldn’t tell if something was bothering my own partner, would I?”
“So does this mean you’re worried?”
“Yes.”
“And you’ve tried him at home?”
“His cell is the only way to reach him. I also texted him and sent him an e-mail. No response. I was thinking of driving over to his apartment in Fremont.”
Wanger was already nodding as he chewed.
“Do it,” he said. “Right now.”
• • •
Sophie stood at Grant’s door on the third floor of his townhome walkup. The building was nice, but Grant had about as much design sense as a monk.
She pounded on his door again.
“Grant! You in there?”
No answer.
Turning away, she pushed the thought out of her mind that he was lying dead in there. She had circled the surrounding blocks several times, but couldn’t find his black Crown Vic. At least that
was something.
Halfway down the last flight of stairs, her phone rang—Detective Dobbs calling. She answered as she moved past the mailboxes and toward the front door.
“What’s up, Art?”
“I just got a strange call. A groundskeeper spotted a man in the Japanese garden at the Washington Park Arboretum.”
“So what?”
“Silver responded. Turns out it’s Benjamin Seymour, your missing lawyer.”
“So Seymour’s okay?”
“Not exactly.”
“What does that mean?”
“Just go see for yourself.”
Sophie pushed open the front door and headed down the concrete steps toward her silver TrailBlazer which she’d double-parked in front of the building.
“I’m on my way,” she said.
“Where are you?”
“Fremont. Have Bobby keep eyes on him.”
“Any word on Grant?”
“I’m just leaving his apartment. He isn’t here.”
“Your boy’ll turn up. Probably just tripped over a big night.”
“Hey, Art?”
“Yeah?”
Her car alarm chirped.
“He’s not my boy.”
“If you say so.”
Chapter 17
Grant could see that he was standing on two feet, but it didn’t feel that way. He’d had his share of I-feel-like-death hangovers in recent years, but nothing approaching this. His head felt like the Liberty Bell—deeply cracked—and a pool of something in his stomach was threatening to surface.
He stepped over his still-sleeping sister onto the frigid hardwood floor and made a mad dash to the bathroom off the kitchen.
Knees hit tile, and he just managed to throw open the toilet seat before spewing his guts into the bowl.
He flushed.
Hauled himself up.
Cranked open the faucet and rinsed his mouth and spit.
He’d had a few drinks the night before, but he didn’t deserve this.
Grant turned the water off and straightened. His back cracked. He dug the crust from the corners of his lids with a knuckle and checked his reflection in the mirror—eyes sunken and red-veined, hair like something out of an eighties music video.
He ran a hand over the scratch of fresh beard.
Something about his face seemed off. After a night of too much booze and restless sleep, he could faithfully count on swollen cheeks and puffy eyes. But this morning, nothing about him looked bloated. His face was as thin as he’d seen it in years. Verging into gaunt.
He walked through the kitchen and up the hallway into the foyer.
Unlocked the front door, stepped out onto the porch.
His ears popped from that persistent pressure gradient.
The rain had stopped and the air smelled of wet pavement. The sky hadn’t cleared, but the clouds overhead were thin enough for the incoming sunlight to burn his eyes. It was a suddenly warm Friday for December and people would be pouring out of their homes and into the green spaces with the kind of shared satisfaction that only rainy cities relish on days like this.
A woman ran by pushing a jogger-stroller.
The streets hummed with traffic.
The hedges dripped.
Wind pushed the scent of a distant coffee shop his way.
He glanced at his watch—later than he thought. They’d slept past noon.
His fingernails looked dirty, but he knew it wasn’t that.
Don’s blood.
The despair and heartache nearly brought him to his knees.
The view off the front porch was panoramic—Lake Union spread out before him, a fleet of sailboats and kayaks speckling its grey surface with color. The Cascades were still socked in. Farther up on the north bank, the hulking ruins of Gas Works Park loomed over squares of bright, rain-fresh grass like the skyline of a steampunk novel. Grant couldn’t see the people, but he imagined them on picnic blankets, children scrambling up the hill, dragging kites in the breeze behind them.
He drew in a deep breath.
Took a step down.
Then another.
As if this day was just something he could walk out into.
What had been a dull, painless throbbing behind his eyes ratcheted up a few degrees until it felt like someone was rolling his optic nerve between two meaty fingers.
He descended two more steps.
The meaty fingers became a poking needle.
His stomach contracted into a ball of molten iron, and the agony doubled him over, Grant clutching his gut as he tried to backpedal up the steps.
By the time he reached the landing, clawing desperately for the door, the pain had begun to moderate.
Grant stumbled back into the gloom of Paige’s brownstone.
His sister was sitting up on the mattress in the living room, her knees drawn into her chest.
“How far did you get?” she asked.
“Two steps from the bottom.”
Grant made his way over to the couch and collapsed onto it.
“Did you throw up yet?” she asked. “That’s how I start the morning these days.”
“First thing.”
“It’s not a hangover.”
“I know.”
“It only gets worse.”
“Is this you trying to help?”
“Sorry.”
“It’s warmer outside than it is in here,” Grant said.
“I think it’s your body temperature, not just the house. Chills?”
Grant hadn’t noticed chills specifically amid the grocery list of other symptoms, but he did feel feverish.
“Yeah. I’m gonna build a fire.”
“We’re out of firewood.”
“We aren’t out of furniture.” He sat up, wrapped the covers around his shoulders. “What’s going on in this house, Paige?”
“I don’t know.”
“No idea.”
“None.”
“Nothing weird has happened to you lately that you’re forgetting to tell me?”
“Like what?”
“Oh, I don’t know. You haven’t desecrated any sacred Indian burial grounds lately, have you?”
“Not lately.”
“No deals with some guy in a red lounge suit holding a garden tool?”
She just smiled.
“So what then?” Grant asked.
“I don’t know. This isn’t a Halloween special.”
“You’ve been living with this thing for a month.”
“Well aware.”
“So what do you think it is?”
She shook her head.
“No matter what you say, I won’t judge you.”
“You remember going to church with Mom and Dad?”
“Barely.”
“Remember how it was only ever about Satan and demons?”
“That’s all I remember about it.”
“Me too, and it scared me atheist. When we stopped going after Mom died, I still couldn’t get that stuff out of my head.”
“I remember your nightmares.”
“Right,” Paige said. “They were horrible. I used to dream that this demon I could never see was crawling down the hall toward our bedroom. I knew it was coming, but I couldn’t move. My legs had stopped working. Its shadow—Jesus, it still creeps me out big time—would stop in the doorway behind me. I could feel it standing there, and every time I tried to sit up and turn around to see it, I’d wake up.”
“That’s pretty standard nightmare material.”
“But that’s what these last four weeks have felt like. The same kind of fear—of being alone in a house, but knowing you aren’t really alone.”
“And not being able to do anything about it, including leaving.”
“Exactly. It’s this helpless, claustrophobic feeling.”
“So you think it’s something demonic?”
“I don’t know. All I’m saying is that it feels like the kind of thing I used to be afraid of.�
��
“Have you called anyone?”
“Who would I call?”
“A professional.”
“You mean like an exorcist?”
“I know, I can’t believe I’m suggesting it.”
Paige cocked her head. “You think we should?”
Grant didn’t want to say it. Every ounce of training, years of collecting facts and scrutinizing them screamed that there was a corporeal explanation here that could be booked down at the station. He based his life, his choices, on empirical evidence. Aristotle and all that shit.
“It doesn’t matter whether we believe in it or not,” he said. “There’s something happening in this house and it doesn’t look like we’re equipped to deal with it. I say we bring someone in. You got a phone book?”
“In the kitchen.”
“I could use some coffee now that I mention it.”
“We still don’t have power.”
“You have a French press?”
“Nope.”
“No worries. Long as you’ve got the beans, I can save the day.”
Chapter 18
Grant opened the gas on one of the back burners and struck a match. It ignited with a whoomf and settled down into a neat blue circle of quietly-hissing flame. He set a copper-bottomed pot filled with tap water onto the burner.
“Whole bean all you got?” he said, peering into the stainless steel canister where Paige kept her stash.
“Sorry.”
He thought for a moment.
“You have anything made of silk?”
A few minutes later, Grant was pouring a handful of beans into one of Paige’s socks and beating them into grounds with a meat pulverizer.
On the other side of the kitchen, his sister was fishing through a drawer jammed to bursting with junk that either didn’t have a home or had fallen out of use—a refuge of forgotten toys.
Paige fished out the fat Seattle phone book, let it thud against the counter.
“Haven’t seen one of these in awhile,” she said.
It was waterlogged and dogeared. Grant imagined it sitting on the front steps like a lost kitten for days in the rain before Paige had finally surrendered and brought it inside.
She fanned it open.
“E for exorcist?” she asked.
“I guess.”
Grant looked over her shoulder as she thumbed back to the yellow pages.
“It’s not in the Es.”
“Don’t priests handle these things? Maybe we can talk to whoever’s in charge of whatever-the-hell parish we’re in.”
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