Koontz, Dean R. - Hideaway

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Koontz, Dean R. - Hideaway Page 4

by Hideaway(Lit)


  Lindsey. Their names were stitched on the breast pockets of their

  jackets: David O'Malley and Jerry Epstein. With a curious combination

  of professional detachment and concerned attentiveness, they began to

  work on her, exchanging medical information with each other in crisp

  emotionless voices but speaking to her in soft, sympathetic, encouraging

  tones.

  That dichotomy in their behavior alarmed rather than soothed Lindsey,

  but she was too weak and disoriented to express her fear. She felt

  infuriatingly delicate. Shaky. She was reminded of a surrealistic

  painting This World and the Next, which she had done last year, because

  the central figure in that piece had been a wire-walking circus acrobat

  plagued by uncertainty. Right now consciousness was a high wire on

  which she was precariously perched. Any effort to speak to the

  paramedics, if sustained for more than a word or two, might unbalance

  her and send her into a long, dark fall.

  Although her mind was too clouded to find any sense in most of what the

  two men were saying, she understood enough to know that she was

  suffering from hypothermia, possibly frostbite, and that they were

  worried about her. Blood pressure too low. Heartbeat slow and

  irregular. Slow and shallow respiration.

  Maybe that clean getaway was still possible.

  If she really wanted it.

  She was ambivalent. If she actually had hungered for death on a

  subconscious level since Jimmy's funeral, she had no special appetite

  for it now-though neither did she find it particularly unappealing.

  Whatever happened to her would happen, and in her current condition,

  with her emotions as numb as her five senses, she did not much care

  about her fate.

  Hypothermia switched off the survival instinct with a narcotizing pall

  as effective as that produced by an úalcoholic hinge.

  Then, between the two muttering paramedics, she caught a glimpse of

  Hatch lying on the other gurney, and abruptly she was jolted out of her

  half-trance by her concern for him. He looked so pale. But not just

  white.

  Another, less healthy shade of pale with a lot of gray in it. His lab

  turned toward her, eyes closed, mouth open slightly-looked as if a flash

  fire had swept through it, leaving nothing between bone and skin except

  the ashes of flesh consumed.

  "Please," she said, "my husband." She was surprised that her voice was

  just a low, rough croak.

  "You first," O'Malley said.

  "No. Hatch. Hatch needs ... help."

  "You first," O'Malley repeated.

  His insistence reassured her somewhat. As bad as Hatch looked, he must

  be all right, must have responded to CPR, must be in better shape than

  she was, or otherwise they would have tended to him first. Wouldn't

  they?

  Her thoughts grew fuzzy again. The sense of urgency that had gripped

  her now abated. She closed her eyes.

  2

  Later In Lindsey's hypothermic torpor, the murmuring voices above her

  seemed as rhythmic, if not as melodic, as a lullaby. But she was kept

  awake by the increasingly painful stinging sensation in her extremities

  and by the rough handling of the medics, who were packing small

  pillowlike objects against her sides. Whatever the things were-electric

  or chemical heating pads, she supposed they radiated a soothing warmth

  far different from the fire burning within her feet and hands.

  "Hatch needs warmed up, too," she said thickly.

  "He's fine, don't you worry about him," Epstein said. His breath puffed

  out in small white clouds as he spoke.

  "But he's cold."

  "That's what he needs to be. That's just how we want him."

  O'Malley said, "But not too cold, Jerry. Nyebern doesn't want a Pod

  sickle. Ice crystals form in the tissue, there'll be brain damage."

  Epstein turned to the small half-open window that separated the rear of

  the ambulance from the forward compartment. He called loudly to the

  driver: "Mike, turn on a little heat maybe."

  Lindsey wondered who Nyebern might be, and she was alarmed by the words

  "brain damage." But she was too weary to concentrate and make sense of

  what they said.

  Her mind drifted to recollections from childhood, but they were so

  distorted and strange that she must have slipped across the border of

  consciousness into a half-sleep where her subconscious could work

  nightmarish tricks on her memories.

  ... she saw herself five years of age, at play in a meadow behind her

  house.

  The sloped field was familiar in its contours, but some hateful

  influence had crept into her mind and meddled with the details, wickedly

  recoloring the grass a spider-belly black. The petals of all the

  flowers were blacker still, with crimson stamens that glistened like fat

  drops of blood. .

  she saw herself at seven, on the school playground at twilight, but

  alone as she had never been in real life. Around her stood the usual

  array of swings and seesaws and jungle gyms and slides, casting crisp

  shadows in the peculiar orange light of days end. Those machineries of

  joy seemed curiously ominous now. They loomed malevolently, as if they

  might begin to move at any second, with much creaking and clanking, blue

  St. Elmo's fire glowing on their flanks and limbs, seeking blood for a

  lubricant, robotic vampires of aluminum and steel. 3

  Periodically Lindsey heard a strange and distant cry, the mournful bleat

  of some great, mysterious beast. Eventually, even in her semi-delirious

  condition, she realized that the sound did not originate either in her

  imagination or in the distance but directly overhead. It was no beast,

  just the ambulance siren, which was needed only in short bursts to clear

  what little traffic had ventured onto the snow-swept highways.

  The ambulance came to a stop sooner than she had expected, but that

  might be only because her sense of time was as out of whack as her other

  perceptions. Epstein threw the rear door open while O'Malley released

  the spring clamps that fixed Lindsey's gurney in place.

  When they lifted her out of the van, she was surprised to see that she

  was not at a hospital in San Bernardino, as she expected to be, but in a

  parking lot in front of a small shopping center. At that late hour the

  lot was deserted except for the ambulance and, astonishingly, a large

  helicopter on the side of which was emblazoned a red cross in a white

  circle and the words AMBULANCE SERVICE.

  The night was still cold, and wind hooted across the blacktop. They

  were now below the snow line, although just at the base of the mountains

  and still far from San Bernardino. The ground was bare, and the wheels

  of the gurney creaked as Epstein and O'malley rushed Lindsey into the

  care of the two men waiting beside the chopper.

  The engine of the air ambulance was idling. The rotors turned

  sluggishly.

  The mere presence of the craft-and the sense of extreme urgency that it

  represented-was like a flare of sunlight that burned off some of the

  dense fog in Lindsey's mind. She realized that either she
or Hatch was

  in worse shape than she had thought, for only a critical case could

  justify such an unconventional and expensive method of conveyance. And

  they obviously were going farther than to a hospital in San Bernardino,

  perhaps to a treatment center specializing in state-of-the-art trauma

  medicine of one kind or another. Even as that light of understanding

  came to her, she wished that it could be extinguished, and she

  despairingly sought the comfort of that mental fog again.

  As the chopper medics took charge of her and lifted her into the

  aircraft, one of them shouted above the engine noise, "But she's alive."

  "She's in bad shape," Epstein said.

  "Yeah, okay, she looks like shit," the chopper medic said, "but she's

  still alive. Nyebern's expecting a stiff."

  O'Malley said, "It's the other one."

  "The husband," Epstein said.

  "We'll bring him over," O'malley said.

  Lindsey was aware that a monumental piece of information had been

  revealed in those few brief exchanges, but she was not clearheaded

  enough to understand what it was. Or maybe she simply did not want to

  understand.

  As they moved her into the spacious rear compartment of the helicopter,

  transferred her onto one of their own litters, and strapped her to the

  vinyl-covered mattress, she sank back into frighteningly corrupted

  memories of childhood: she was nine years old, playing fetch with her

  dog, Boo, but when the frisky labrador brought the red rubber ball back

  to her and dropped it at her feet, it was not a ball any longer. It was

  a throbbing heart, trailing torn arteries and veins. It was pulsing not

  because it was alive but because a mass of worms and sarcophagus beetles

  churned within its rotting chambers 4

  The helicopter was airborne. Its movement, perhaps because of the

  winter wind, was less reminiscent of an aircraft than of a boat tumbling

  in a bad tide. Nausea uncoiled in Lindsey's stomach.

  A medic bent over her, his face masked in shadows, applying a

  stethoscope to her breast.

  Across the cabin, another medic was shouting into a radio headset as he

  bent over Hatch, talking not to the pilot in the forward compartment but

  perhaps to a receiving physician at whatever hospital awaited them.

  His words were sliced into a series of thin sounds by the air-carving

  rotors overhead, so his voice fluttered like that of a nervous

  adolescent.

  ..... minor head injury no mortal wounds apparent cause of death seems

  to be ... drowning On the far side of the chopper, near the foot of

  Hatch's litter, the sliding door was open a few inches, and Lindsey

  realized the door on her side was not fully closed, either, creating an

  arctic cross draught. That also explained why the roar of the wind

  outside and the clatter of the rotors were so deafening.

  Why did they want it so cold?

  The medic attending to Hatch was still shouting into his headset:

  mouth-to-mouth . mechanical resuscitator C.O2 and cO-2 without results

  epinephrine was ineffective..."

  The real world had become too real, even viewed through her delirium.

  She didn't like it. Her twisted dreamscapes, in all their mutant

  horror, were more appealing than the inside of the air ambulance,

  perhaps because on a subconscious level she was able to exert at least

  some control on her nightmares but none at all on real events.

  ... she was at her senior prom, dancing in the arms of Joey Delvecchio,

  the boy with whom she had been going steady in those days. They were

  under a vast canopy of crepe-paper streamers. She was speckled with

  sequins of blue and white and yellow light cast off by the revolving

  crystal-and-mirror chandelier above the dance floor. It was the music

  of a better age, before rock-and-roll started to lose its soul, before

  disco and New Age and hip-hop, back when Elton John and the Eagles were

  at their peak, when the Isley Brothers were still recording, the Doobie

  Brothers, Stevie Wonder, Neil Sedaka making a major comeback, the music

  still alive, everything and everyone so alive, the world filled with

  hope and possibilities now long since lost. They were slow-dancing to a

  Freddy Fender tune reasonably well rendered by a local band, and she was

  suffused with happiness and a sense of well-being-until she lifted her

  head from Joey's shoulder and looked up and saw not Joey's face but the

  rotting countenance of a cadaver, yellow teeth exposed between shriveled

  black lips, flesh pocked and blistered and oozing, bloodshot eyes

  bulging and weeping vile flu from lesions of decay. She tried to scream

  and pull away from him, but she could only continue to dance, listening

  to the overly sweet romantic strains of 'Before the Next Teardrop Falls,

  "aware that she was seeing Joey as he would be in a few years, after he

  had died in the Marine-barracks explosion in Lebanon.

  She felt death leeching from his cold flesh into hers. She knew she had

  to tear herself from his embrace before that mortal tide filled her.

  But when she looked desperately around for someone who might help her,

  she saw that Joey was not the only dead dancer. Sally Ontkeen, who in

  eight years would succumb to cocaine poisoning, glided by in an advanced

  stage of decomposition, in the arms of her boyfriend who smiled down on

  her as if una ware of the corruption of her flesh. Jack Winslow, the

  school football star who would be killed in a drunken driving accident

  in less than a year, spun his date past them; his face was swollen,

  purple tinged with green, and his skull was crushed along the left side

  as it would be after the wreck. He spoke to Lindsey and Joey in a raspy

  voice that didn't belong to Jack Winslow but to a creature on holiday

  from a graveyard vocal cords withered into dry strings: "What a night!

  Man, what a night!"

  Lindsey shuddered, but not solely because of the frigid wind that howled

  through the partly open chopper doors.

  The medic, his face still in shadows, was taking her blood pressure.

  Her left arm was no longer under the blanket. The sleeves of her

  sweater and blouse had been cut away, exposing her bare skin. The cuff

  of the sphygmomanometer was wound tightly around her biceps and secured

  by Velcro straps. Her shudders were so pronounced that they evidently

  looked, to the paramedic, as if they might be the muscle spasms that

  accompanied convulsions. He plucked a small rubber wedge from a nearby

  supply tray and started to insert it in her mouth to prevent her from

  biting or swallowing her tongue.

  She pushed his hand away. "I'm going to die."

  Relieved that she was not having convulsions, he said, "No, you're not

  that bad, you're okay, you're going to be fine."

  He didn't understand what she meant. Impatiently, she said, "We're all

  going to die."

  That was the meaning of her dream-distorted memories. Death had been

  with her from the day she'd been born, always at her side, constant

  companion, which she had not understood until Jimmy's death five years

  ago, and which she had not accepted until tonight when death took Hatch
r />   from her.

  Her heart seemed to clutch up like a fist within her breast. A new pain

  filled her, separate from all the other agonies and more profound.

  In spite of terror and delirium and exhaustion, all of which she had

  used as shields against the awful insistence of reality, truth came to

  her at last, and she was helpless to do anything but accept it.

  Hatch had drowned.

  Hatch was dead. CPR had not worked.

  Hatch was gone forever.

  she was twenty-five years old, propped against bed pillows in the

  maternity ward at St. Joseph's Hospital. The nurse was bringing her a

  small blanket-wrapped bundle, her baby, her son, James Eugene Harrison,

  whom she had carried for nine months but had not met, whom she loved

  with all her heart but had not seen. The smiling nurse gently conveyed

  the bundle into Lindsey's arms, and Lindsey tenderly lifted aside the

  satin-trimmed edge of the blue cotton blanket. She saw that she cradled

  a tiny skeleton with hollow eye sockets, the small bones of its fingers

  curled in the wanting-needing gesture of an infant. Jimmy had been born

  with death in him, as everyone was, and in less than five years cancer

  would claim him. The small, bony mouth of the skeleton-child eased open

  in a long, slow, silent cry 5

  Lindsey could hear the chopper blades carving the night air, but she was

  no longer inside the craft. She was being wheeled across a parking lot

  toward a large building with many lighted windows. She thought she

 

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