Blind Pursuit

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Blind Pursuit Page 23

by Michael Prescott


  Better to splash his victims with gas and toss a lighted match than to ... to ...

  “Fuck,” he whispered, testing the word, a word he had not used—not once—since he was fifteen years old.

  The muttered obscenity drew the muscles of his groin tighter. He shifted in the driver’s seat.

  Turn around. He had to turn around, go back, fuck her. Fuck her and then burn her, burn her—

  “I won’t,” he murmured, his eyes misting. “I won’t do it. I won’t.”

  Tension racked his body. He couldn’t fight himself much longer.

  But perhaps he didn’t have to.

  There might be a way out. A way to find relief.

  His photo. His special picture.

  Yes. Go home. Remove the photograph from its hiding place. And then ...

  He knew what he would do.

  Would it be enough? He wasn’t sure. But it was his last hope.

  As he swung off Houghton Road onto 22nd Street, he glanced at the dashboard clock: 8:15.

  His apartment was only fifteen minutes away—ten, if he maintained this reckless speed.

  And if a traffic cop should pull him over ...

  He fingered the shotgun mounted under the dash, then lightly touched the handgun in his pocket.

  Any cop who tried to ticket him would be dead. Anyone who interfered with him tonight, anyone who fucked with him ...

  Dead.

  47

  Annie had trouble finding a parking space in Gund’s neighborhood. Finally she pulled into a curbside slot on a side street, outside a used-car lot protected by a security fence and a restless Doberman. Her dashboard clock glowed 8:05 when she killed the engine.

  The guard dog growled at her through the fence as she walked swiftly to the corner. She turned east and hurried past a dreary row of brick houses, their sandy lots bordered by chain-link fencing. Graffiti clung to walls and utility poles like patches of black fungus. From some homes the drone of a television or radio was audible, the voices on the broadcasts always in Spanish.

  Gund’s apartment was a ground-floor unit at the front corner of a two-story stucco building. His windows were dark, his curtains drawn.

  No fence around the place—that was one obstacle she wouldn’t have to contend with, anyway—but covering the front windows were iron security bars.

  Impossible to get in that way, and she lacked the skills to pick the lock on the door. Maybe she would find some means of access at the side of the unit.

  A narrow passageway ran between the apartment building and the house next door. Through the wall of the house bled the loud, insistent blare of Mexican music. Shadows of human figures flitted across the lowered window shades like drifting clouds of smoke.

  Annie crept down the passage, past a wheeled trash bin and another barred window, then stopped at what must be Gund’s bathroom window. It was a slender rectangle of frosted glass, five feet off the ground, sealed shut, and unbarred.

  She studied the window, uncertain if it was wide enough for her to squeeze through. She thought it was—just barely.

  For a moment she hesitated. Was she really going to do this?

  Then her resolve stiffened. For Erin she would. For Erin.

  The music from next door ought to cover the sound of breaking glass. All she needed was a way to smash the window. Should have brought the jack from the trunk of her car, but she hadn’t thought of it.

  She’d make a lousy burglar, she decided. She wasn’t even dressed right.

  A black jumpsuit would have been the appropriate attire. She was still wearing her clothes from work—a brightly colored cotton skirt and a floral-print blouse. The blouse would look good in the mug shot, at least.

  The small joke made her frown. There wasn’t going to be any mug shot. Everything would be fine, and there was no reason, absolutely none, for her hands to be trembling.

  They trembled anyway as she rummaged through the trash bin and found someone’s gooseneck lamp, the cord badly frayed. She hefted the lamp experimentally. It seemed sturdy enough to do the job.

  Leaning against the bin, drawing a slow breath to compose herself, she felt a hand on her arm.

  “Jesus.”

  She swung around, instinctively raising the lamp as a weapon, and saw two green eyes staring at her from a foot away.

  Cat’s eyes. An alley cat, that’s all it was, just an alley cat that had climbed atop the bin and touched her with its paw.

  “Oh, God, puss, you scared me.”

  The cat sniffed her clothes, unafraid. Annie realized the scent of her own house cat must have drawn the stray’s attention.

  “His name is Stink,” she whispered. “He’s got green eyes like yours—and mine. Maybe the three of us are related.”

  The cat appeared unimpressed with this hypothesis.

  “Okay now, scoot. Scoot.”

  Gently she brushed the cat away. It bounded off the bin and meandered a few yards down the passageway, then stood watching, a silent spectator.

  Her conversation with the cat, one-sided though it had been, had calmed her somewhat. She always felt soothed in the presence of a feline, whether Stink or this mangy stray. Cats were good for the soul. Maybe if Harold had a cat, he wouldn’t—

  A new worry froze her. How did she know he didn’t own a cat? Or worse, far worse, a dog? A guard dog, even, like that Doberman at the auto lot?

  She might enter the apartment only to find herself pinned to a wall, fangs at her throat.

  Then she shook her head firmly. “That won’t happen. Come on, girl. No more procrastination.”

  A quick breath of courage, and she turned to face the window. Holding the lamp by its base, she jabbed the glass. The window cracked on her first attempt, crumbled to shards with a second, stronger thrust. Both sounds were largely swallowed by the wail of mariachi horns next door.

  Carefully she swept the frame clear, using the metal neck of the lamp, then rolled the Dumpster under the window and climbed onto the lid.

  A glance at the far end of the passageway revealed two green eyes still burning against the dark.

  “Wish me luck,” she whispered to the cat.

  Its answering meow heartened her.

  Gingerly she inserted one leg through the window, then the other. Inch by inch she wriggled in, holding fast to the sill, her feet probing until they found a smooth, sturdy surface. Resting on it, she was able to release her grip on the sill and draw her upper body, her arms, and finally her head inside.

  She found herself squatting on the porcelain lid of the toilet tank. For several breathless seconds she waited tensely, until she felt reasonably confident that no German shepherd was about to charge out of the dark and savage her throat.

  Then she stepped cautiously onto the seat of the commode and hopped to the floor.

  She was in.

  It was a strange feeling to be alone in the dark in an unfamiliar home—uninvited, an intruder, a trespasser.

  She listened for sounds of movement elsewhere in the apartment. Heard nothing but the Mexican music and, overhead, a creak of restless footsteps.

  Had Gund’s upstairs neighbor heard the window shatter or glimpsed her sneaking in? Dialed 911? Reports of a prowler were given top priority; response time would be short.

  The footsteps continued, back and forth, back and forth, registering no urgency. Annie decided the tenant was merely pacing.

  It must drive Harold crazy to hear that all night, she reflected, before reminding herself that he might be crazy anyway.

  Okay. Search the place. Fast.

  She was in a hurry to get out. The apartment, closed up all day, was hot and stuffy; she found it hard to breathe. Or maybe it was fear that shut her throat. Suddenly her certainty that Gund would not return for hours seemed baseless, mere wishful thinking. For all she knew, he was on his way home right now. Might be outside the front door, inserting his key in the lock—

  “Quit it,” she whispered harshly. “Get to work.”


  Her hand on the wall switch, she hesitated.

  Turn on the lights? It seemed dangerous. If Gund did return, he would see the lighted windows from the street.

  But not this window. Only those in front.

  She decided on a compromise. She would use the lights only in rooms facing the building next door. And she would turn off the light as she left each room.

  She flipped the switch, and a ceiling lamp winked on, dazzling after the minutes she’d spent in darkness.

  The bathroom seemed ordinary enough. Not as clean as it could be, some unpleasant smells. Towels on dented metal racks. Shampoo in the shower. Bar of soap in a porcelain dish on the Formica counter. Mirror over the sink, her reflection gazing back at her with frightened eyes.

  Near the mirror, a medicine cabinet. Quickly she surveyed its shelves, looking for Erin’s Tegretol. If Gund had it, the bottle would tie him to her disappearance. Even Walker couldn’t dispute that.

  There was no Tegretol. No medication of any kind except aspirin and antacids.

  She switched off the bathroom light and emerged into a narrow hallway. Darkness in both directions. She turned left, groping along the wall until she found a door.

  Pushing it open, she entered a bedroom in the front corner of the apartment. The glow of a streetlight through the curtains provided sufficient illumination as she explored the room.

  Cheap bed with creaky mattress springs. Bedside alarm clock, the dial luminous: 8:20. Clothes in the closet, but none of Erin’s things. Her suitcase wasn’t there, either.

  Nothing suspicious so far. She returned to the hall and found a doorway to the living room. Even in darkness she could see that the place was sparsely furnished—battered sofa, a single floor lamp, an ancient television set resting on an apple crate, a dining table flanked by unmatched garage-sale chairs.

  The room was most remarkable for what it did not contain. There were no books, no record albums, no paintings, no family photographs, no souvenirs from excursions to the Grand Canyon or San Diego. There was nothing.

  “Harold,” she whispered. “Poor Harold.”

  For a moment she forgot to be afraid of him. He was just a lonely man without a life.

  Unless he was something worse.

  Searching the living room was the work of a minute; there was nothing to see. She moved on to the kitchen, in the northwest corner of the apartment, far enough from any windows to make it safe to turn on a light.

  The overhead fluorescent cast a pale, glareless glow on soiled countertops and peeling linoleum tiles. Dirty dishes crowded the sink; the water had drained away. A beetle scurried behind the refrigerator, black carapace gleaming.

  She checked the silverware drawers, thinking vaguely she might find some obvious weapon—a bloodstained knife perhaps. There was only ordinary cutlery, inadequately cleaned, particles of dried food sticking to tines and blades.

  In a lower drawer there was a miscellany of household hardware. Cigarette lighters, manual can openers, a corkscrew, scissors of various sizes, and, lying carelessly atop the pile, a ring of keys.

  The ring was tagged with a piece of masking tape marked SPARES.

  Spare keys to the apartment? Or to whatever secret place Gund had been headed earlier tonight?

  She examined the key ring more closely. Six keys in all, each with a bit of tape inked in the same careful hand.

  FRONT DOOR. BARN. STAIRS. CELLAR.

  And two smaller keys, probably for padlocks: GATE, REAR DOOR.

  Not for this place, obviously. These were the keys to a farm or ranch with a barn, a cellar, and a padlocked gate.

  There were ranches in the desert southeast of town, where she had lost Gund’s trail. Perhaps he was at one of them at this moment, with the original set of keys.

  Perhaps Erin was there, too.

  Annie hesitated, then slipped the keys into the pocket of her skirt, supplementing her original crime of illegal entry with a new offense, burglary.

  Shutting off the fluorescent, she retraced her steps to the hall. The hall closet, overlooked earlier, was opposite the bathroom. A bare bulb illuminated shelves of cardboard cartons, apparently stuff from Wisconsin that Gund had never unpacked.

  Nearly all of the apartment had been covered by now. There remained only the far end of the hall.

  She slipped past the bathroom and found an open door to a small study—desk and swivel chair, file cabinet, wastebasket. The window faced the building across the passageway—safe to use a light. She fumbled for the desk lamp’s pull chain, and the bulb snapped on.

  Erin’s stationery was not in the desk drawers. Disappointed, Annie knelt by the file cabinet, trying the lower drawer first. She thumbed through a row of manila folders, scanning the gummed labels.

  TAXES. BILLS. AUTO. MEDICAL.

  All marked with years ranging from 1985 to 1991. Old records, of no interest now.

  Standing, she opened the upper drawer. It contained the same sorts of records, but from more recent years, with the current files foremost in line.

  Nothing there, either.

  Well, what had she expected to find? A file marked REILLY KIDNAPPING? Containing a helpful map to the site of Erin’s imprisonment?

  Angrily she shook her head. This whole venture had been a waste of time.

  Her hand was pushing the drawer shut when she noticed a slim folder at the extreme rear of the cabinet, the only one that was unlabeled.

  Funny how it was stuffed all the way in the back, unmarked, as if hidden.

  She reached for the folder, opened it.

  Its entire contents consisted of a single sheet of heavy, unlined paper, approximately eight by ten inches.

  As she lifted the paper into the light, she realized that what she held was a glossy color photo, its back to her.

  She turned it over, and suddenly she was shaking, shaking uncontrollably, her heart racing in her chest.

  “How?” she whispered to the room, to the night. “How can he have this?”

  Two smiling faces. Green eyes and gray. Red hair lustrous on bare shoulders.

  The eight-by-ten studio portrait of Erin and herself.

  48

  The van’s dashboard clock read 8:25 when Gund parked at a red curb, alongside a hydrant, yards from his apartment’s front door. He didn’t give a damn about a parking ticket.

  The photo. That was his sole concern. He had to get the photo.

  Before tonight he had never grasped its full significance. Now he knew why it had transfixed him, how he’d lost himself in the picture for hours at a time. He knew, and the knowledge sickened him.

  Staring at their faces, their beautiful faces, staring hour after hour, night after night ...

  When the dream would wake him, when he found himself getting hard, then he would take out the picture and study it. He had found it soothing, or so he’d told himself.

  The truth was uglier. The picture had not soothed, but stimulated.

  He wondered if he had even ...

  While staring at it, had he ...?

  No. He couldn’t have.

  And yet ...

  Suppose, while gazing at the photograph, lost in contemplation, oblivious to everything around him and within him ... he had touched himself.

  He had no memory of it. But he had blanked out his awareness of so much else that mattered. He had shut his inner eyes to so many truths. Why not to one more?

  A shudder racked him. He threw open the van door. Crossed a strip of weedy grass to the paved walkway. Keys jingling nervously in his fingers, the flap of his jacket swirling, the gun in his pocket thumping against his hip.

  Even if he was right in his supposition, even if the photo had served that ugly purpose for him, it would serve a very different purpose now.

  He would destroy it. Touch a lighter to it and set it aflame. And by burning the photograph, symbolically burn the two women whose images it captured.

  That might be enough—just enough—to suppress the impulses thre
atening to overwhelm him.

  It would have to be.

  He fumbled the key into the keyhole. The door swung open, and he lunged into his living room, flicking on the lights.

  * * *

  Annie gazed, frozen, at the photograph.

  Did he take it from Erin’s apartment? she wondered blankly. Go back for it when he returned for the Tegretol?

  No, that couldn’t be the answer. This photo had not spent the past six months in a frame, under glass. It had been handled, roughly and repeatedly. The edges were worn, the corners dog-eared.

  She thought back to the day last November when she’d picked up her order from the portrait studio—multiple copies of the photo in different sizes. She’d returned to her shop with the envelope, but she hadn’t had time to count the prints until that night, when she’d found only three eight-by-tens, not four as requested. The studio, apologizing for the oversight, had supplied an additional print at no cost.

  But it hadn’t been the studio’s error. Sometime during the afternoon, when the envelope was in her office at the rear of the shop, Gund must have taken one of the prints. Hidden it, and carried it home with him that evening.

  He’s had it ever since, she thought as a wave of cold seeped slowly into her bones. And he’s been ... looking at it. Holding it. He’s—

  From the living room, the groan of a door.

  The floorboards trembled.

  Gund was back.

  And coming this way. Coming fast.

  She pushed the cabinet drawer shut, grabbed the desk lamp’s pull chain, yanked it savagely. The room went dark.

  Footsteps in the hall. Closer.

  Under the desk. Get under the desk.

  Groping blindly, she shoved the swivel chair out of the way, went down on all fours, crawled into the kneehole between the desk legs. Seized the chair and wheeled it back into position, then huddled behind it.

  Sudden harsh glare from above. The ceiling light had come on with a flick of a wall switch.

  Gund’s pants brushed past the desk as he hurried to the file cabinet. She heard the slide of a drawer.

  Instantly she guessed what he was looking for. The photo, of course.

 

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