FIVE Oil-black rain briefly blazed as bright as molten gold, down through lamplight, drizzled over the van, and then puddled black again around the tires.
'Where?' Tommy asked, blinking rain out of his eyes, studying the murkiness beyond the van's windshield, searching for some sign of the demon. 'I don't see it.'
'Neither do I,' she said. 'But it's there, all right, in the van. I sense it.'
'You're psychic all of a sudden?'
'Not all of a sudden,' she said, her voice thickening, as though sleep was overcoming her. 'I've always had strong intuition, very reliable.'
Thirty feet away, the Ford van was exactly as it had been when they had left it to go into the bakery. Tommy didn't feel what Del felt. He perceived no sinister aura around the vehicle.
He looked at Del as she stared intently at the van. Rain streamed down her face, dripped off the end of her nose and off the point of her chin. Her eyes weren't blinking, and she seemed to be sinking into a trance. Her lips began to move, as though she were speaking, but no sound escaped her.
'Del?'
After a moment her silently moving lips produced a wordless murmur, and then she began to whisper:
'Waiting . . . cold as ice . . . dark inside . . . a dark cold thing. . . ticktock... ticktock...'
He shifted his attention to the van again, and now it seemed to loom as ominously as a hearse. Del's fear had infected him, and his heart raced as he was overwhelmed by a sense of impending assault.
The woman's whisper faded into the susurration of the raindrops dissolving against the puddled pavement. Tommy leaned closer. Her voice was hypnotically portentous, and he didn't want to miss anything that she said.
Ticktock... so much bigger now... snake's blood and river mud... blind eyes see... dead heart beats... a need... a need... a need to feed....
Tommy wasn't sure which frightened him more at the moment: the van and the utterly alien creature that might be crouching within it - or this peculiar woman.
Abruptly she emerged from her mesmeric state. 'We have to get out of here. Let's take one of these cars.'
'An employee's car?'
She was already moving away from the van, among the more than thirty vehicles that belonged to the workers at New World Saigon Bakery.
Glancing warily back at the van, Tommy hurried to keep up with her. 'We can't do that.'
'Sure we can.'
'It's stealing.'
It's survival,' she said, trying the door of a blue Chevrolet, which was locked.
'Let's go back into the bakery.'
'The deadline is dawn, remember?' she said, moving on to a white Honda. 'It won't wait forever. It'll come in after us.'
She opened the driver's door of the Honda, and the dome light came on, and she slipped in behind the steering wheel. No keys dangled in the ignition, so she searched under the seat with one hand to see if the owner had left them there.
Standing at the open door of the Honda, Tommy said, 'Then let's just walk out of here.'
'We wouldn't get far on foot before it caught us. I'm going to have to hot-wire this crate.'
Watching as Del groped blindly for the ignition wires under the dashboard, Tommy said, 'You can't do this.'
'Keep a watch on my Ford.'
He glanced over his shoulder. 'What am I looking for?'
'Movement, a strange shadow, anything,' she said nervously. 'We're running out of time. Don't you sense it?'
Except for the wind-driven rain, the night was still around Del's van.
'Come on, come on,' Del muttered to herself, fumbling with the wires, and then the Honda engine caught, revved.
Tommy's stomach turned over at the sound, for he seemed to be sliding ever faster down a greased slope to destruction - if not at the hands of the demon, then by his own actions.
'Hurry, get in,' Del said as she released the hand-brake.
'This is car theft,' he argued.
'I'm leaving whether you get in or not.'
'We could go to jail.'
She pulled the driver's door shut, forcing him to step back, out of the way.
Under the tall sodium-vapour lamp, the silent van appeared to be deserted. All the doors remained closed. The most remarkable thing about it was the Art Deco mural. Already its ominous aura had faded.
Tommy had allowed himself to be infected by Del's hysteria. The thing to do now was get control of himself, walk over to the van, and show her that it was safe.
Del put the Honda in gear and drove forward. Quickly stepping in front of the car, slapping his palms down flat on the hood, Tommy blocked her way, forcing her to stop. 'No. Wait, wait.'
She shifted into reverse and started to back out of the parking space.
Tommy ran around to the passenger's side, caught up with the car, pulled open the door, and jumped inside. 'Will you just wait a second, for God's sake?'
'No,' she said, braking and shifting out of reverse. As she tramped the accelerator, the car shot forward across the parking lot, and the door beside Tommy was flung shut.
They were briefly blinded by the rain until Del found the switch for the windshield wipers.
'You're not thinking this through,' he argued.
'I know what I'm doing.'
The engine screamed, and great plumes of water sprayed up from the tires.
'What if the cops stop us?' Tommy worried.
'They won't.'
'They will if you keep driving like this.'
At the end of the large building, before turning the corner, Del braked hard. The car shrieked, fishtailing as it slid to a full stop.
Studying her rear-view mirror, she said, 'Look back.'
Tommy turned in his seat. 'What?'
'The van.'
Under the tall lamppost, falling rain danced on empty pavement.
For a moment Tommy thought he was looking in the wrong place. There were three other lampposts behind the bakery. But the van was not under any of those, either.
'Where'd it go?' he asked.
'Maybe out to the alley, or maybe around the other side of the building, or maybe it's just behind those delivery trucks. I can't figure why it didn't come straight after us.' She drove forward, around the corner, along the side
of the bakery, toward the front.
Bewildered, Tommy said, 'But who's driving it?'
'Not a who. A what.'
'That's ridiculous,' he said.
'It's a lot bigger now.'
'It would have to be. But still-' 'It's changed.'
'And it got a driver's license, huh?'
'It's very different from what you've seen before.' 'Yeah? What's it like now?'
'I don't know. I didn't see it.' 'Intuition again?'
'Yeah. I just know. . . it's different.'
Tommy tried to envision a monstrous entity, something like one of the ancient gods from an old H.P. Lovecraft story, with a bulbous skull, a series of mean little scarlet eyes across its forehead, a sucking hole where the nose should be, and a wicked mouth surrounded by a ring of writhing tentacles, comfortably ensconced behind the steering wheel of the van, fumbling with a clumsy tentacle at the heater controls, punching the radio selector buttons in search of some old-fashioned rock-'n'-roll, and checking the glove box to see if it could find any breath mints.
'Ridiculous,' he repeated.
'Better belt up,' she said. 'We might be in for a bumpy ride.'
As Tommy buckled the safety harness across his chest, Del drove speedily but warily from the shadow of the bakery and across the front parking lot. Clearly, she expected the Art Deco van to bullet out of the night and crash into them.
A debris-clogged storm drain had allowed a small lake to form at the exit from the lot. Leaves and paper litter swirled across the choppy surface.
Del slowed and turned right into the street, through the dirty water. Theirs was the only vehicle in sight.
'Where did it go?' Del Payne wondered. 'Why the hell isn't it following us?'
Tommy checked his luminous wristwatch. Eleven minutes after one o'clock.
Del said, 'I don't like this.'
Ticktock.
Half a mile from the New World Saigon Bakery, in the stolen Honda, Tommy broke a three-block silence. 'Where did you learn to hot-wire a car?'
'My mom taught me.'
'Your mom.'
'She's cool.'
'The one who likes speed, races stock cars and motorcycles.'
'Yep. That's the one. The only mom I've got.' 'What is she - a getaway driver for the mob?' 'In her youth, she was a ballet dancer.' 'Of course. All ballet dancers can hot-wire a car.'
'Not all of them,' Del disagreed. 'After she was a ballet dancer' 'She married Daddy.'
'And what does he do?'
Checking the rear-view mirror for any sign of a pursuer, Del said, 'Daddy plays poker with the angels.'
'You're losing me again.'
'He died when I was ten.'
Tommy regretted the sarcastic tone he had adopted. He felt coarse and insensitive. Chastened, he said, 'I'm sorry. That's tough. Only ten.'
'Mom shot him.'
Numbly, he said, 'Your mother the ballerina.'
'Ex-ballerina by then.'
'She shot him?'
'Well, he asked her to.'
Tommy nodded, feeling stupid for having regretted his sarcasm. He slipped comfortably back into it: 'Of course, he did.'
'She couldn't refuse.'
'It's a marital obligation in your religion, is it? To kill one's spouse upon request?'
'He was dying of cancer,' Del said.
Tommy felt chastened again. 'Jesus, I'm sorry.'
'Pancreatic cancer, one of the most vicious.'
'You poor kid.'
They were no longer in an industrial district. The broad avenue was lined with commercial enterprises. Beauty salons. Video stores. Discount electronics and discount furniture and discount glassware stores. Except for an occasional 7-Eleven or twenty-four-hour-a-day coffee shop, the businesses were closed and dark.
Del said, 'When the pain got so bad Daddy couldn't concentrate on the cards any more, he was ready to go. He loved cards, and without them, he just didn't feel he had any purpose.'
'Cards?'
'I told you - Daddy was a professional poker player.'
'No, you said he now plays poker with the angels.'
'Well, why would he be playing poker with them if he wasn't a professional poker player?'
'Point taken,' Tommy said, because sometimes he was smart enough to know when he had been defeated.
'Daddy travelled all over the country, playing in high stakes games, most illegal, though he played a lot of legal games in Vegas too. In fact, he twice won the World Championship of Poker. Mom and I went with him everywhere, so by the time I was ten, I'd seen most of this country three times or more.'
Wishing he could just keep his mouth shut but too fascinated to resist, Tommy said, 'So your mother shot him, huh?'
'He was in the hospital, pretty bad by then, and he knew he was never getting out.'
'She shot him right there in the hospital?'
'She put the muzzle of the gun against his chest, positioned it very carefully right over his heart, and Daddy told her he loved her more than any man had ever loved a woman before, and she said she loved him and would see him on the Other Side, and then she pulled the trigger, and he died instantly.'
Aghast, Tommy said, 'You weren't there at the time, were you?'
'Heavens, no. What kind of person do you think Mom is? She'd never have put me through something like that.'
'I'm sorry. I should have-'
'She told me all about it an hour later, before the cops came by the house to arrest her, and she gave me the expended cartridge from the round that killed him.'
Del reached inside her wet uniform blouse and fished out a gold chain. The pendant suspended at the end of the chain was an empty brass shell casing.
'When I hold this,' Del said, wrapping her hand around the shell casing, 'I can feel the love - the incredible love
- they had for each other. Isn't it the most romantic thing ever?'
'Ever,' Tommy said.
She sighed and tucked the pendant inside her blouse once more. 'If only Daddy hadn't gotten cancer until I was closer puberty, then he wouldn't have had to die.'
For a while Tommy struggled to understand that one, but at last he said, 'Puberty?'
'Well, it wasn't to be. Fate is fate,' she said cryptically.
Half a block ahead of them, on the far side of the wide street, a police cruiser was just starting to turn out of the westbound lane into the parking lot at an all-night diner.
'Cops,' Tommy said, pointing.
'I see them.'
'Better slow down.'
'I'm really in a hurry to get back to my place.'
'You're doing twenty over the speed limit.'
'I'm worried about Scootie.'
'We're in a stolen car,' he reminded her.
They breezed past the police cruiser without slowing. Tommy twisted in his seat to look through the back window.
'Don't worry about him,' Del said, 'he won't come after us.'
The squad car had braked when they shot past it. 'Who's Scootie?' Tommy asked, still watching the patrol car behind them.
'I told you before. My dog. Don't you ever listen?' After a hesitation, the squad car continued to pull into the parking lot at the diner. The lure of coffee and doughnuts was apparently stronger than the call of duty.
As Tommy let out a sigh of relief and faced front again, Del said, 'Would you shoot me if I asked you to?'
'Absolutely.'
She smiled at him. 'You're so sweet.'
'Did your mother go to jail?'
'Only until the trial was over.'
'The jury acquitted?'
'Yeah. They deliberated only fourteen minutes, and they were all crying like babies when the foreman read the verdict. The judge was crying too, and the bailiff. There wasn't a dry eye in the courtroom.'
'I'm not surprised,' Tommy said. 'After all it's an extremely touching story.' He wasn't sure whether he was being sarcastic or not. 'Why are you worried about Scootie?'
'There's some weird thing driving around in my van, you know, so maybe it knows my address now and even knows how much I love my Scootie.'
'You really think it stopped chasing us just so it could go kill your dog?'
She frowned. 'You're saying that's unlikely?'
'It's me that's cursed, me that it's been sent to get.' Glancing at him disapprovingly, she said, 'Well, look who's all of a sudden turned into Mr. Ego. You're not the centre of the universe, you know.'
'I am as far as this demon is concerned! I'm its whole reason for existence!'
'Whatever, I'm not taking any chances with my Scootie,' she said stubbornly.
'He's safer at home than with us.'
'He's safest with me.'
She turned south on Harbour Boulevard. Even at that hour and in the rain, there was a steady flow of traffic.
'Anyway,' she said, 'as far as I can see, you don't exactly have any clever plan for survival that we have to put into action right this minute.'
'Just keep moving, I think. When we stop, it's easier for the thing to find us.'
'You can't know that for sure.'
'I have intuition too, you know.'
'Yeah, but it's mostly bogus.'
'It is not,' he disagreed. 'I'm very intuitive.'
'Then why did you bring this devil doll into your house?'
'It did make me uneasy.'
'Later, you thought you'd gotten away from your house clean. You didn't know the creature was hitching a ride in the Corvette's engine compartment.'
'No one's intuition is totally reliable.'
'Now, honey, face it. Back there at the bakery, you would've gotten in the van.'
Tommy chose not to respond. With a computer - or even a pencil and paper - and enough time, he could have crafted a reply to refute her, to humble her with logic and penetrating insights and dazzling wit. But he had neither a computer nor (with dawn rolling inexorably toward them out of the now-black east) enough time, so he would have to spare her the punishing experience of his devastating verbal virtuosity.
Placatingly, Del said, 'We'll stop at my place just long enough to pick up Scootie, and then we'll hit the road again, cruise around until it's time to call your brother and see if he's been able to translate the note.'
Newport Harbour, home to one of the largest armadas of private yachts in the world, was enclosed on the north by the curve of the continental shoreline and on the south by a three-mile-long peninsula that extended west to east and separated the hundreds of protected boat docks and moorings from the surges of the Pacific.
The homes on the shoreline and on the five islands within the harbour were among the priciest in southern California. Del lived not in a less expensive home on one of the land-locked blocks of Balboa Peninsula, but in a sleek three-story contemporary house that faced the harbour.
As they approached the place, Tommy leaned forward, staring out of the windshield in astonishment.
Because she had left her garage-door opener in the van, Del parked the stolen Honda on the street. The police wouldn't be looking for it yet - not until the shifts changed at the bakery.
Tommy continued to stare through the blurring rain after Del switched off the windshield wipers. In the burnishing glow of the landscape lighting that under lit the queen palms, he could see that every corner of the house was softly rounded. The patinated-copper windows were rectangular with radius corners, and the white stucco was towelled so smoothly that it appeared to be as slick as marble, especially when wet with rain. It was less like a house than like a small, gracefully designed cruise ship that had run aground.
'You live here?' he asked wonderingly.
'Yeah.' She opened her door. 'Come on. Scootie's wondering where I am. He's worried about me.'
Tommy got out of the Honda and followed her through the rain to a gate at one side of the house, where she entered a series of numbers - the disarming code - into a security keypad.
'The rent must be astronomical,' he said, dismayed to think that she might not be a renter at all but might be living here with the man who owned the place.
'No rent. No mortgage. It's mine,' she said, unlocking the gate with keys that she had fished from her purse.
As he closed the heavy gate behind them, Tommy saw that it was made of patinated geometric copper panels of different shapes and textures and depths. The resultant Art Deco pattern reminded him of the mural on her van.
Following her along a covered, pale-quartzite walkway in which flecks of mica glimmered like diamond chips under the light from the low path lamps, he said, 'But this must've cost a fortune.'
'Sure did,' she said brightly.
The walkway led into a romantic courtyard paved with the same quartzite, sheltered by five more dramatically lighted queen palms, softened with beds of ferns, and filled with the scent of night-blooming jasmine.
Bewildered, he said, 'I thought you were a waitress.'
'I told you before - being a waitress is what I do. An artist is what I am.'
'You sell your paintings?'
'Not yet.'
'You didn't pay for this from tips.'
'That's for sure,' she agreed, but offered no explanation.
Lamps glowed warmly in one of the downstairs rooms facing onto the courtyard. As Tommy followed Del to the front door, those windows went dark.
'Wait,' he whispered urgently. 'The lights.'
'It's okay.'
'Maybe the thing got here ahead of us.'
'No, that's just Scootie playing with me,' she assured him.
'The dog can turn off the lights?'
She giggled. 'Wait'll you see.' She unlocked the front door and, stepping into the foyer, said, 'Lights on.'
Responding to her vocal command, the overhead fixture and two sconces glowed.
'If my cell phone wasn't in the van,' she said, 'I could've called ahead to the house computer and turned on any combination of lights, the spa, the music system, the TV. The place is totally automated. I also had the software customized so Scootie can turn the lights on in any room with just one bark and turn them off with two.'
'And you could train him to do that?' Tommy asked, closing the door behind him and engaging the thumb turn deadbolt.
'Sure. Otherwise he never barks, so he can't confuse the system. Poor thing, he's here alone for hours at a time in the evening. He should be able to have it dark if he wants to nap - and light if he's feeling lonely or spooked.'
Tommy had expected the dog to be waiting at the door, but it was not in sight. 'Where is he?'
'Hiding,' she said, putting her purse on a foyer table with a black granite top. 'He wants me to find him.'
'A dog that plays hide and seek?'
'Without hands, it's too frustrating to play Scrabble.'
Tommy's wet shoes squished and squeaked on the honed travertine floor. 'We're making a mess.'
'It's not Chernobyl.'
'Huh?'
'It'll clean up.'
At one end of the generous foyer, a door stood ajar. Del went to it, leaving wet shoeprints on the marble.
'Is my naughty little fur ball in the powder room?' she asked in an annoyingly cute, coddling tone of voice. 'Hmmmm? Is my bad boy hiding from his mommie? Is my bad boy hiding in the powder room?'
She opened the door, manually switched on the lights, but the dog wasn't there.
'I didn't think so,' she said, leading Tommy into the living room. 'That was too easy. Though sometimes, he knows easy works because it's not what I'm expecting. Lights on.'
The large travertine-floored living room was furnished with J. Robert Scott sofas and chairs upholstered in platinum and gold fabrics, blond-finished tables in exotic woods, and bronze Art Deco lamps in the form of nymphs holding luminous crystal balls. The enormous Persian carpet boasted such an intricate design and was so softly coloured, as if exquisitely faded by time, that it must be an antique.
Del's vocal command had switched on mood lighting that was low enough to minimize reflection on the glass wall and allow Tommy to see outside to the patio and the boat dock. He also had a glimpse of rain-dimmed harbour lights.
Scootie was not in the living room. He wasn't in the study or the dining room, either.
Following Del through a swinging door, Tommy stepped into a large, stylish kitchen with clear-finished maple cabinets and black-granite counter tops.
'Oh, him not here, either,' Del said, cooing again as if talking to a baby. 'Where could my Scootie-wootums be? Did him turn off the lights and quick-like-a-bunny run upstairs?'
Tommy was riveted by a wall clock with a green neon rim. It was 1:44 in the morning. Time was running out, so the demon was sure to be seeking them with increasing fury.
'Let's find the damn dog and get out of here quick,' he said nervously.
Pointing to a tall narrow section of cabinetry next to which Tommy was standing, Del said, 'Get me the broom out of there, would you, please?'
'Broom?'
'It's the broom closet.'
Tommy opened the door.
Squeezed into the broom closet was a huge midnight-black creature with teeth bared and fat pink tongue lolling, and Tommy bolted backward, slipped in his own wet shoeprints, and fell on his butt before he realized that it wasn't the demon leering out at him. It was a dog, an enormous black Labrador.
Del laughed delightedly and clapped her hands. 'I knew you were in there, you naughty little fur ball!'
Scootie grinned out at them.
'I knew you'd give Tommy a good scare,' she told the dog.
'Yeah, just what I needed,' Tommy said, getting to his feet.
Panting, Scootie came out of the closet. The space was so narrow and the dog so large that it was like a cork coming out of a wine bottle, and Tommy half expected to hear a pop.
'How'd he get in there?' Tommy wondered.
Tail wagging furiously, Scootie went directly to Del, and she dropped to her knees so she could pet him and scratch behind his ears. 'Him miss mommie, did him? Hmmmmm? Was him lonely, my fuzzy-wuzzy baby, my cutie Scootie?'
'He couldn't step in there and turn around,' Tommy said. 'Not enough room.'
'He probably backed into it,' Del said, hugging Scootie. 'Dogs don't back into things any more than motorcycles do. Besides, how did he get the door shut after he was in there?'
'It falls shut on its own,' Del said.
Indeed, the broom-closet door had slowly closed after the Labrador had squeezed out of confinement into the kitchen.
'Okay, but how did he open it in the first place?' Tommy persisted.
'Pawed it open. He's clever.'
'Why did you teach him this?'
'Teach him what?'
'To play hide-and-seek.'
'Didn't teach him. He's always liked to do it.'
'It's weird.'
Del puckered her lips and made kissing sounds. The dog took the cue and began to lick her face.
'That's disgusting,' Tommy said.
Giggling, Del said, 'His mouth is cleaner than yours.'
'I seriously doubt that.'
As if quoting from a medical journal, she pulled back from the Labrador and said, 'The chemical composition of a dog's saliva makes its mouth a hostile environment for the spectrum of bacteria that are harmful to people.'
'Bullshit.'
'It's true.' To Scootie, she said, 'He's just jealous, because he wants to lick my face.'
Nonplussed, blushing, Tommy looked at the wall clock. 'Okay, we have the dog, so let's get out of here.'
Rising to her feet, heading out of the kitchen, with the dog at her heels, Del said, 'A waitress's uniform isn't suitable gear for a girl on the lam. Give me five minutes to change clothes, get into jeans and a sweater, and then we can split.'
'No, listen, the longer we stay in one place, the quicker it's going to find us.'
In a train - woman, dog, and man - they crossed the dining room as Del said, 'Relax, Tommy. There's always enough time if you think there is.'
'What's that mean?'
'Whatever you expect is what will be, so simply change your expectations.'
'I don't know what that means, either.'
'It means what it means,' she said, enigmatic once more.
In the living room, he said, 'Damn it, wait a minute!'
Del turned to look at him.
The dog turned to look at him.
Tommy sighed, gave up. 'Okay, change your clothes. But hurry.'
To the dog, Del said, 'You stay here and get acquainted with Tuong Tommy.' Then she went into the foyer and up the stairs.
Scootie cocked his head, studying Tommy as if he were a strange and amusing form of life never seen before.
'Your mouth is not cleaner than mine,' Tommy said.
Scootie pricked one ear.
'You heard me,' Tommy said.
He crossed the living room to the large glass sliding doors and gazed out toward the harbour. Most of the houses on the far shore were dark. Where dock and landscape lamps glowed, attenuated reflections of gold and red and silver light glimmered hundreds of feet across the black water
After a few seconds, Tommy became aware of being watched - not by someone outside, but by someone inside
He turned and saw the dog hiding behind the sofa, only its head revealed, observing him.
'I see you,' Tommy said.
Scootie pulled his head back, out of sight.
Along one wall was a handsome entertainment centre and library unit made from a wood with which Tommy was unfamiliar. He went to have a closer look, and he discovered that the beautiful grain was like rippled ribbons that appeared to undulate as he shifted his head from one side to the other.
He heard noises behind him and knew that Scootie was on the move, but he refused to be distracted from his examination of the entertainment centre. The depth of the glossy lacquer finish was remarkable.
From elsewhere in the room came the sound of a fart.
'Bad dog,' he said.
The sound repeated.
Finally Tommy turned.
Scootie was sitting on his hindquarters in one of the armchairs, staring at Tommy, both ears pricked, holding a large rubber hotdog in his mouth. When he bit down on the toy, it made that sound again. Perhaps the rubber hotdog had once produced a squeak or a whistle, but now only a repulsive flatulence issued from it.
Checking his watch, Tommy said, 'Come on, Del.'
Then he went to an armchair that directly faced that in which the dog sat, with only the coffee table between them. The chair was upholstered in leather, in a sea skin shade, so he didn't think his damp jeans would harm it.
He and Scootie stared at each other. The Labrador's eyes were dark and soulful.
'You're a strange dog,' Tommy said.
Scootie bit the hotdog again, producing the blatty noise.
'That's annoying.'
Scootie chomped on the toy.
'Don't.'
Another faux fart.
'I'm warning you.'
Again the dog bit the toy, again, and a third time.
'Don't make me take it away from you,' Tommy said. Scootie dropped the hotdog on the floor and barked twice.
The room was plunged into darkness, and Tommy was startled out of his chair before he remembered that two closely spaced barks was the signal that told the computer to switch off the lights.
Even as Tommy was bolting to his feet, Scootie was coming across the coffee table in the dark. The dog leaped, and Tommy was carried backward into the leather armchair.
The dog was all over him, chuffing in a friendly way, licking his face affectionately, licking his hands when he raised them to cover his face.
'Stop, damn it, stop, get off me.'
Scootie scrambled off Tommy's lap, onto the floor -but seized the heel of his right shoe and began to worry at it, trying to gain possession of it.
Not wanting to kick at the mutt, afraid of hurting it, Tommy reached down, trying to get hold of its burly head.
The Rockport suddenly slipped off his foot.
'Ah, shit.'
He heard Scootie hustling away through the darkness with the shoe.
Getting to his feet, Tommy said, 'Lights!' The room remained dark, and then he remembered the complete command. 'Lights on!'
Scootie was gone.
From the study, adjacent the living room, came a single bark, and light appeared beyond the open door.
'They're both crazy,' Tommy muttered as he went around the coffee table and picked up the rubber bone from beside the second armchair.
Scootie appeared in the study doorway, without the shoe. When he saw that he'd been seen, he retreated.
Limping across the living room to the study, Tommy said, 'Maybe the dog wasn't always crazy. Maybe she made it crazy, the same way she'll make me crazy sooner or later.'
When he entered the study, he found the dog standing on the bleached-cherry desk. The mutt looked like an absurdly oversized decorative accessory.
'Where's my shoe?'
Scootie cocked his head as if to say, What shoe? Holding up the toy hotdog, Tommy said, 'I'll take this outside and throw it in the harbour.'
With his soulful eyes focused intently on the toy, Scootie whined.
'It's late, I'm tired, my Corvette blew up, some damn thing is after me, so I'm in no mood for games.'
Scootie merely whined again.
Tommy circled the desk, searching for his shoe.
Atop the desk, Scootie turned, following him with interest.
'If I find it without your help,' Tommy warned, 'then I won't give the hotdog back.'
'Find what?' Del asked from the doorway.
She had changed into blue jeans and a cranberry-red turtle-neck sweater, and she was holding two big guns.
'What the hell are those?' Tommy asked.
Hefting the weapon in her right hand, she said, 'This is a short-barreled, pump-action, pistol-grip, 12-gauge Mossberg shotgun. Excellent home-defence weapon.' She raised the gun in her left hand. 'This beauty is a Desert Eagle .44 Magnum pistol, Israeli-made. It's a real door-buster. A couple of rounds from this baby will stop a charging bull.'
'You run into a lot of charging bulls?'
'Or the equivalent.'
'No, seriously, why do you keep heavy artillery like that?'
'I told you before - I lead an eventful life.'
He remembered how easily she had dismissed the damage to her van earlier in the evening: It comes with the territory.
And when he had worried about the rain ruining the upholstery, she had shrugged and said, There's frequently damage... I've learned to roll with it.
Tommy sensed a satori, a sudden profound insight, looming like a tidal wave, and he waited breathlessly for it to wash over him. This woman was not what she appeared to be. He had thought of her as a waitress, but had discovered she was an artist. Then he had thought of her as a struggling artist who worked as a waitress to pay the rent, but she lived in a multimillion-dollar house. Her eccentricities and her habit of peppering her conversation with cryptic babble and non sequiturs had convinced him that she had a few screws loose in the cranium, but now he suspected that the worst mistake he could make with her would be to write her off as a flake. There were depths to her that he was only beginning to perceive -and swimming in those depths were some strange fish that would surprise him more than anything that he had seen to date.
He recalled another fragment of their conversation, and it seemed to have new import: Reality is perception. Perceptions change. Reality is fluid. So if by 'reality' you mean reliably tangible objects and immutable events, then there's no such thing. I'll explain someday when we have more time.
He sensed that every screwball statement she made was not, in fact, half as screwball as it seemed. Even in her most air headed statements, an elusive truth was lurking. If he could just step back from her, put aside the conception of her that he had already formed, he would see her entirely differently from the way that he saw her now. He thought of those drawings by M.C. Escher, which played with perspective and with the viewer's expectations, so a scene might appear to be only a drift of lazily falling leaves until, suddenly, one saw it anew as a school of fast-swimming fish. Within the first picture was hidden another. Within Del Payne was hidden a different person - someone with a secret - who was cloaked by the ditsy image that she projected.
The satori, tidal wave of revelation, loomed, loomed, loomed - and then began to recede without bringing him understanding. He had strained too hard. Sometimes enlightenment came only when it wasn't sought or welcomed.
Del stood in the doorway between the study and the living room, a gun in each hand, meeting Tommy's gaze so directly that he half suspected she knew what he was thinking.
Frowning, he said, 'Who are you, Del Payne?'
'Who is any of us?' she countered.
'Don't start that again.'
'Don't start what?'
'That inscrutable crap.'
'I don't know what you're talking about. What're you doing with Scootie's rubber hotdog?'
Tommy glared at the Labrador on the desk. 'He took my shoe.'
In an admonishing tone, she said to the dog, 'Scootie?'
The mutt met her eyes almost defiantly, but then he lowered his head and whined.
'Bad Scootie,' she said. 'Give Tommy his shoe.' Scootie studied Tommy, then chuffed dismissively. 'Give Tommy his shoe,' Del repeated firmly. Finally the dog jumped down from the desk, padded to a potted palm in one corner of the room, poked its head behind the celadon pot, and returned with the athletic shoe in his mouth. He dropped it on the floor at Tommy's feet.
When Tommy bent down to pick up his shoe, the dog put one paw on it - and stared at the rubber hotdog.
Tommy put the hotdog on the floor.
The dog looked at the hotdog and then at Tommy's hand, which was only a few inches away from the toy.
Tommy withdrew his hand.
The Labrador picked up the hotdog with his mouth -and only then lifted his paw off the shoe. He padded into the living room, biting on the toy to produce the farting sound.
Staring thoughtfully after Scootie, Tommy said, 'Where did you get that mutt?'
'At the pound.'
'I don't believe it.'
'What's not to believe?'
From the living room came a veritable symphony of rubber-hotdog flatulence.
'I think you got him from a circus.'
'He's clever,' she agreed.
'Where did you really get him?'
'At a pet store.'
'I don't believe that, either.'
'Put on your shoe,' she said, 'and let's get out of here.'
He hobbled to a chair. 'Something's strange about that dog.'
'Well, if you must know,' Del said flippantly, 'I'm a witch, and he's my familiar, an ancient supernatural entity who helps me make magic.'
Untying the knot in his shoelace, Tommy said, 'I'd believe that before I'd believe you found him at the pound. He's got a demonic side to him.'
'Oh, he's just a little jealous,' Del said. 'When he gets to know you better, he'll like you. The two of you are going to get along famously.'
Slipping his foot into the shoe, Tommy said, 'What about the house? How can you afford this place?'
'I'm an heiress,' she said.
He tied the shoelace and got to his feet. 'Heiress? I thought your father was a professional poker player.'
'He was. A damned good one. And he invested his winnings wisely. When he died, he left an estate worth thirty-four million dollars.'
Tommy gaped at her. 'You're serious, aren't you?'
'When am I not?'
'That's the question, alright.'
'You know how to use a pump-action shotgun?'
'Sure. But guns aren't going to stop it.'
She handed the Mossberg to him. 'They might slow it down - like your pistol did. And these pack a lot more punch. Come on, let's hit the road. I think you're right about being safe only when we're on the move. Lights out.'
Following her out of the now dark study, Tommy said, 'But... for God's sake, when you're already a multimillionaire, why do you work as a waitress?'
'To understand.'
'Understand what?'
Moving toward the foyer, she said, 'Lights out,' and the living room went dark. 'To understand what the average person's life is like, to keep my feet on the ground.'
'That's ridiculous.'
'My paintings wouldn't have any soul if I didn't live part of my life the way most people do.' She opened the door to the foyer closet and slipped a blue nylon ski jacket off a hanger. 'Labour, hard work, is at the centre of most people's lives.'
'But most people have to work. You don't. So in the end, if it's only a choice for you, how can you really understand the necessity the rest of us feel?'
'Don't be mean.'
'I'm not being mean.'
'You are. I don't have to be a rabbit and get myself torn to pieces in order to understand how a poor bunny feels when a hungry fox chases it through a field.'
'Actually, I suspect you do have to be the rabbit to really know that kind of terror.'
Shrugging into the ski jacket, she said, 'Well, I'm not a rabbit, never have been a rabbit, and I'm not going to become a rabbit. What an absurd idea.'
'What?'
'If you want to know what that kind of terror feels like, then you become a rabbit.'
Befuddled, Tommy said, 'I've lost track of the conversation, the way you keep twisting things around. We aren't talking about rabbits, for God's sake.'
'Well, we certainly weren't talking about squirrels.'
Trying to get the discussion back on track, he said, 'Are you really an artist?'
Sorting through the other coats in the closet, she said, 'Is any of us really anything?'
Exasperated with Del's preference for speaking in cryptograms, Tommy indulged in one himself: 'We're anything in the sense that we are everything.'
'You've finally said something sensible.'
'I have?'
Behind Tommy, as if by way of comment, Scootie bit the rubber hotdog: tthhhpphhtt.
Del said, 'I'm afraid none of my jackets will fit you.'
'I'll be okay. I've been cold and wet before.' On the granite-topped foyer table, beside Del's purse, were two boxes of ammunition: cartridges for the Desert Eagle and shells for the 12-gauge Mossberg that Tommy carried. She put down the pistol and began to fill the half dozen zippered pockets of her ski jacket with spare rounds for both weapons.
Tommy studied the painting that hung above the table:
a bold work of abstract art in primary colours. Are these your paintings on the walls?'
'That would be tacky, don't you think? I keep all my canvases in my studio, upstairs.'
'I'd like to see them.'
'I thought you were in a hurry.'
Tommy sensed that the paintings were the key that would unlock the mysteries of this strange woman-
-tthhhpphhtt-
-and her strange dog. Something about her style or her subject matter would be a revelation, and upon seeing what she had painted, he would achieve the satori that had eluded him earlier.
'It'll only take five minutes,' he pressed.
Still jamming spare ammo into her pockets, she said, 'We don't have five minutes.'
'Three. I really want to see your paintings.'
'We've got to get out of here.'
'Why are you suddenly so evasive?' he asked.
Zipping shut a pocket bulging with shotgun shells, she said, 'I'm not being evasive.'
'Yes, you are. What the hell have you been painting up there?'
'Nothing.'
'Why are you so nervous all of a sudden?'
'I'm not.'
'This is weird. Look me in the eyes, Del.'
'Kittens,' she said, avoiding his gaze.
'Kittens?'
'That's what I've been painting. Stupid, tacky, sentimental crap. Because I'm not really very talented. Kittens with big eyes. Sad little kittens with big sorrowful eyes and happy little kittens with big laughing eyes. And moronic scenes of dogs playing poker, dogs bowling. That's why I don't want you to see them, Tommy. I'd be embarrassed.'
'You're lying.'
'Kittens,' she insisted, zipping shut another pocket.
'I don't think so.' He started toward the stairs. 'Two minutes is all I need.'
She snatched the Desert Eagle .44 Magnum off the foyer table, swung toward him, and pointed the weapon at his face. 'Stop right there.'
'Jesus, Del, that gun's loaded.'
'I know.'
'Don't point it at me.'
'Get away from the stairs, Tommy.'
There was nothing frivolous about her now. She was cold and businesslike.
'I'd never point this at you,' he said, indicating the shotgun in his right hand.
'I know,' she said flatly, but she didn't lower her weapon.
The muzzle of the Desert Eagle was only ten inches from Tommy and aligned with the bridge of his nose.
He was looking at a new Deliverance Payne. Steely. His heart thudded hard enough to shake his entire body. 'You won't shoot me.'
'I will,' she said with such icy conviction that she could not be doubted.
'Just to keep me from seeing some paintings?'
'You're not ready to see them yet,' she said.
'Meaning. . . someday you will want me to see them.'
'When the time is right.'
Tommy's mouth was so dry that he had to work up some saliva to loosen his tongue. 'But I won't ever see them if you blow my brains out.'
'Good point,' she said, and she lowered the gun. 'So I'll shoot you in the leg.'
The pistol was aimed at his right knee.
'One round from that monster would blow my whole damn leg off.'
'They make excellent prosthetic limbs these days.'
'I'd bleed to death.'
'I know first aid.'
'You're a total fruitcake, Del.'
He meant what he said. To one extent or another, she had to be mentally unbalanced, even though she had told him earlier that she was the sanest person he knew. Regardless of what mysteries she guarded, what secrets she held, nothing she ultimately revealed to him would ever be sufficiently exculpatory to prove her behaviour was reasoned and logical. Nevertheless, though she scared him, she was enormously appealing as well. Tommy wondered what it said about his own sanity to acknowledge that he was strongly attracted to this basket case.
He wanted to kiss her.
Incredibly, she said, 'I think I'm going to fall in love with you, Tuong Tommy. So don't make me blow your leg off.'
Astonished into a blush, conflicted as never before, Tommy reluctantly turned away from the stairs and went past Del to the front door.
She tracked him with the Desert Eagle.
'Okay, okay, I'll wait until you're ready to show them to me,' he said.
At last she lowered her weapon. 'Thank you.'
'But,' he said, 'when I finally do see them, they damn well better be worth the wait.'
'Just kittens,' she said, and she smiled.
He was surprised that her smile could still warm him. Seconds ago, she had threatened to shoot him, but already he felt a pleasant tingle when she favoured him with a smile.
'I'm as crazy as you are,' he said.
'Then you've probably got what it takes to make it till dawn.' Slinging her purse over one shoulder, she said, 'Let's go.'
'Umbrellas?' he wondered.
'Hard to handle an umbrella and a shotgun at the same time.'
'True. Do you have another car besides the van?'
'No. My mom has all the cars, quite a collection. If I need something besides the van, I borrow it from her. So we'll have to use the Honda.'
'The stolen Honda,' he reminded her.
'We're not criminals. We just borrowed it.'
As he opened the front door, Tommy said, 'Lights off,' and the foyer went dark. 'If a cop stops us in our stolen Honda, will you shoot him?'
'Of course not,' she said, following him and Scootie into the courtyard, 'that would be wrong.'
'That would be wrong?' Tommy said, still capable of being amazed by her. 'But it would've been right to shoot me?'
'Regrettable but right,' she confirmed as she locked the door.
'I don't understand you at all.'
'I know,' she said, tucking the keys in her purse.
Tommy checked the luminous dial of his watch. Six minutes past two o'clock.
Ticktock.
While they had been inside the house, the wind had died away completely, but the power of the storm had not diminished. Although no thunder or lightning had disturbed the night for hours, cataracts still crashed down from the riven sky.
The queen palms hung limp, drizzling from the tip of every blade of every frond. Under the merciless lash of the rain, the lush ferns drooped almost to the point of humble prostration, their lacy pinnae glimmering with thousands upon thousands of droplets that, in the low landscape lighting, appeared to be incrustations of jewels.
Scootie led the way, padding through the shallow puddles in the courtyard. In the quartzite paving, specks of mica glinted around the dog's splashing paws, almost as if his claws were striking sparks from the stone. That phantom fire marked his path along the walkway beside the house, as well.
The Art Deco panels of copper were cold against Tommy's hand as he pushed open the gate to the street. The hinges rasped like small whispering voices.
On the sidewalk in front of the house, Scootie abruptly halted, raised his head, and pricked his ears. He dropped his rubber hotdog and growled softly.
Alerted by the dog, Tommy brought up the shotgun, gripping it with both hands.
'What is it?' Del asked. She held the gate open behind them to prevent it from falling shut, automatically locking, and inhibiting their retreat if they needed to go back to the house.
But for the splatter-splash-gurgle-plink of water, the lamp lit street was silent. The houses were all dark. No traffic approached from either east or west. Nothing moved except the rain and those things that the rain disturbed.
The white Honda stood fifteen feet to Tommy's right. Something could be crouched along the far side of it, waiting for them to draw nearer.
Scootie was not interested in the Honda, however, and Tommy was inclined to trust the Labrador's senses more than his own. The dog was riveted by something directly across the street.
At first Tommy could not see anything threatening -or even out of the ordinary. In the storm, the slumbering houses huddled, and the blackness of their blind windows revealed not even a single pale face of any neighbourhood insomniac. Palms, ficuses, and canopied carrotwoods stood solemnly in the windless downpour. Through the cone of amber light cast by the streetlamp, skeins of rain unravelled off the spool of night above, weaving together into a stream that nearly overflowed the gutter.
Then Scootie stiffened and flattened his ears against his skull and growled again, and Tommy spotted the man in the hooded raincoat. The guy was standing near one of the large carrotwoods across the street, beyond the brightest portion of the lightfall from a streetlamp but still vaguely illumined.
'What's he doing?' Del asked.
Although Tommy couldn't see the stranger's shadowed face, he said, 'Watching us.'
Del sounded as if she had seen something else that surprised her: 'Tommy...?'
He glanced at her.
She pointed east.
Half a block away, on the far side of the street, her battered van was parked at the curb.
Something about the imposing figure under the carrotwood tree was anachronistic - as though he had stepped through a time warp, out of the medieval world into the late twentieth century. Then Tommy realized that the hooded raincoat was the source of that impression, for it resembled a monk's robe and cowl.
'Let's get to the Honda,' Del said.
Before they could move toward the car, however, the observer stepped away from the carrotwood, into the glow of the streetlamp. His face remained hidden under the hood, as if he were Death engaged on his nightly collections of those poor souls who perished in their sleep.
Nevertheless, as faceless as he was, the stranger was naggingly familiar to Tommy. Tall. Heavyset. The way he moved.
He was the good Samaritan from earlier in the night, the man who had clumsily descended the embankment from MacArthur Boulevard and crossed the muddy field where the Corvette had crashed. He had been approaching the blazing car when Tommy turned and ran from the fire-enraptured demon.
'Let's see what he wants,' Del said.
'No.'
How the thing-from-the-doll could now be riding the Samaritan, or hiding inside him, or posing as him - this was a mystery that Tommy was not able to fathom. But the fat man in that muddy field no longer existed; he had been either slaughtered and devoured or conquered and controlled. Of that much, Tommy was certain.
'It's not a man,' he said.
The Samaritan moved ponderously through the lamplight.
Scootie's growl escalated into a snarl.
The Samaritan stepped off the curb and splashed through the deep, fast-moving water in the gutter.
'Get back,' Tommy said urgently. 'Back to the house, inside.'
Although his growl had been menacing and he had seemed prepared to attack, Scootie needed no further encouragement to retreat. He whipped around, shot past Tommy, and streaked through the gate that Del was holding open.
Del followed the dog, and Tommy backed through the gate as well, holding the Mossberg in front of him. As the patinated copper panel fell shut Tommy saw the Samaritan in the middle of the street, still heading toward them but not breaking into a run, as if confident that they could not escape.
The gate clacked shut. The electric security lock would buy no more than half a minute, because the Samaritan would be able to climb over the barrier with little trouble.
The portly man would no longer be hampered by his less-than-athletic physique. He would have all the strength and agility of the supernatural entity that had claimed him.
When Tommy reached the courtyard, Del was at the front entrance to the house.
He was surprised that she had been able to fish her keys out of her purse and get the door open so quickly. Evidently Scootie was already inside.
Following Del into the house, Tommy heard the gate rattle out at the street.
He closed the door, fumbled for the thumb-turn, and engaged the deadbolt. 'Leave the lights off.'
'This is a house, not a fortress,' Del said.
'Ssshhh,' Tommy cautioned.
The only sounds from the courtyard were rain splattering against quartzite payers, rain chuckling through downspouts, rain snapping against palm fronds.
Del persisted: 'Tommy, listen, we can't expect to defend this place like a fort.'
Wet and chilled yet again, weary of running, taking some courage from the power of the Mossberg and from the door-buster pistol that Del carried, Tommy hushed her. He remembered a night of terror long ago on the South China Sea, when survival had come only after those refugees in the boat had stopped trying to run from the Thai pirates and had fought back.
Twelve-inch-wide, six-foot-tall sidelights flanked the front door. Through those rain-spotted panes, Tommy was able to see a small portion of the courtyard: wetly glimmering light, blades of darkness that were palm fronds.
The flow of time seemed suspended.
No tick.
No tock.
He was gripping the shotgun so tightly that his hands ached, and the muscles began to twitch in his forearms.
Remembering the green reptilian eye in the torn cotton face of the doll, he dreaded meeting the demon again, now that it was no longer merely ten inches tall.
A moving shadow, swift and fluid and less geometric than those cast by the palm trees and ferns, swooped across one pane of glass.
The fat man didn't knock, didn't ring the bell, didn't leave a note and quietly depart, because he wasn't a good Samaritan any more. He slammed into the door, which shook violently in its frame, slammed into it again so hard that the hinges creaked and the lock mechanism made a half-broken rattling noise, and slammed into it a third time, but still the door held.
Tommy's hammering heart drove him across the dark foyer and nailed him against the wall opposite the door.
Although the sidelights were too narrow to admit the fat man, he smashed his fist through one of them. Shattered glass rang across the travertine floor.
Tommy squeezed the trigger. Flame flared from the muzzle of the Mossberg, and the deafening roar of gunfire rebounded from the walls of the foyer.
Even though the shot gunned Samaritan reeled back from the broken sidelight, he didn't scream in pain. He wasn't a man any more. Pain meant nothing to him.
Her voice hollow and strange in the shivery echo of the blast, Del shouted, 'No, Tommy, no, this place is just a trap! Come on!'
With tremendous force, the fat man slammed into the door again. The deadbolt skreeked against the striker plate, and the squeal of shearing metal rose from the tortured hinges, and wood splintered with a dry cracking sound.
Reluctantly Tommy had to admit that this was not the South China Sea and that their inhuman adversary was not as vulnerable as a mere Thai pirate.
The fat man hit the door again. It would not hold much longer.
Tommy followed Del across the dark living room, able to see her only because she was silhouetted against the wall of glass that faced the harbour lights. Even in the gloom, she knew the place well enough to avoid the furniture.
One of the large sliding glass doors was already open when they reached it. Apparently, Scootie had rolled it aside, because he was waiting for them on the patio.
Tommy wondered how the dog, even as clever as he was, could have managed that feat. Then he heard the front door crash open at the other end of the house, and that frightful sound knocked all of the curiosity out of him.
For some reason, Tommy had thought that Del intended to escape by water, across the harbour to the far shore. But the back-glow from the pier light that shone on her rain-soaked flag was bright enough to reveal that no boat was tied at her private dock. In the empty slip was only rain-stippled black water.
'This way,' she said, hurrying not toward the harbour but to the left across the patio.
Then he expected her to turn left once more into the service way between her house and the one next door, go out to the street again, to the Honda, and try to split before the Samaritan found them. But when she didn't choose that route, he understood why she avoided it. The passage was narrow, flanked by the two houses, with a gate at the far end; once they had entered it, their options would have been dangerously limited.
The homes along the harbour were set close together on narrow lots, because the land on which they stood was enormously valuable. To preserve the multimillion dollar views, the property lines between neighbours' patios and backyards were delineated neither by high walls nor by dense masses of foliage, but by low shrubs, or planter boxes, or fences only two to three feet high.
Scootie bounded over a foot-high planter wall that overflowed with vine geraniums. Del and Tommy followed him onto the brick patio of the neighbouring Cape Cod-style house.
A security lamp on the nearby dock revealed cushion-less teak outdoor furniture left to weather through the winter, terra-cotta pots full of stalk primrose, and a massive built-in barbecue centre now covered with a tailored vinyl rain shield.
They leaped over a low plum-thorn hedge that delineated another property line, squished through a muddy flower bed, crossed another patio behind a stone and mahogany house that seemed inspired by Frank Lloyd Wright, and clambered over more plum-thorn that snagged at the legs of Tommy's jeans, pricked through his socks to puncture the skin at his ankles.
As they headed west along the peninsula, sprinting past the back of a brooding Spanish colonial home with deep balconies on three levels, a formidable dog penned in a narrow run between houses began to bark savagely at them and throw itself against a restraining gate. The hound sounded as eager to rend and kill as any German shepherd or Doberman ever trained by the Gestapo's. Ahead, still more barking arose from other dogs anticipating their approach.
Tommy didn't dare look back, for fear that the Samaritan was at his heels. In his mind's eye, he could see five fat fingers, as pale and cold as those of a corpse, reaching toward him, inches from the nape of his neck.
Behind a three-story ultramodern house that was all angled glass and polished-limestone cladding, blinding banks of floodlights came on, evidently triggered by motion detectors in a security system that was more aggressive than anything protecting the other houses. The shock of this sudden glare caused Tommy to stumble, but he kept his balance and maintained his grip on the shotgun. Gasping for breath, he plunged forward, with Del, across a massive cast-stone balustrade onto the unlighted patio of a Mediterranean-style house, where a TV glowed in the family room and where a startled old man peered out at them as they raced past.
The night seemed to be filled with uncountable barking dogs, all close but out of sight, as though they were falling with the rain, coming down through the black sky, soon to land in packs on all sides.
Three houses beyond the ultramodern pile with the floodlamps, the beam of a big flashlight suddenly speared out of the darkness and the rain, fixing on Del.
The man behind the light shouted, 'Stop right there!'
Without any cry of warning, another guy erupted from the gloom and blindsided Tommy, as if they were professional football players and this were the Superbowl.
They both skidded and went down on the slick concrete decking, and Tommy landed so hard that his breath was knocked out of him. He rolled into some patio chairs that tumbled over with a tubular-steel ringing. Stars swarmed behind his eyes, and he cracked his left elbow squarely on the ulnar nerve - the ill-named funny bone - sending a disabling painful tingle the length of his arm.
To the man with the flashlight, Del Payne said, 'Back off, you asshole, I've got a gun, back off, back off!'
Tommy realized that he had dropped the Mossberg. In spite of the numbing pain in his left arm, wheezing noisily as he struggled to get some air into his lungs, he pushed onto his hands and knees. He was desperate to find the weapon.
The foolhardy tackler was sprawled facedown, groaning, apparently in even worse shape than Tommy. As far as Tommy was concerned, the stupid son of a bitch deserved to have a broken leg, two broken legs, and maybe a skull fracture for good measure. At first he had assumed that the men were cops, but they hadn't identified themselves as policemen, and now he realized that they evidently lived here and fancied themselves to be natural-born heroes ready to take on a pair of fleeing burglars.
As Tommy crawled past the groaning man, he heard Del say, 'Get that damn light out of my eyes right now, or I'll shoot it out and take you with it.'
The other would-be hero's courage wavered, and so did his flashlight.
By a stroke of luck, the nervous beam quivered across the patio, revealing the shotgun.
Tommy crawled to the Mossberg.
The man who'd tackled him had managed to sit up. He was spitting out something - possibly teeth - and cursing.
Clutching at another patio table, Tommy pulled himself to his feet just as Scootie began to bark loudly, urgently.
Tommy glanced to the east and saw the fat man two properties away, silhouetted against the bright backdrop of the floodlamps at the ultramodern house. As the Samaritan raced toward them, leaping a low fence into the property next door, he was no longer the least bit clumsy but as graceful as a panther in spite of his size, his raincoat billowing like a cape behind him.
Snarling fiercely, Scootie moved to intercept the fat man.
'Scootie, no!' Del shouted.
Assuming a shooter's stance as naturally as if she had been born with a gun in her hands, she opened fire with the Desert Eagle when the Samaritan cleared a hedge and splashed onto this patio, where they were apparently going to be forced to make their last stand. She squeezed off three rounds with what seemed to be calm deliberation. The evenly timed explosions were so thunderous that Tommy thought the recoil of the powerful handgun would knock her flat, but she stood tall.
She was an excellent shot, and all three rounds appeared to hit their target. With the first boom, the Samaritan stopped as if he'd run head-on into a brick wall, and with the second boom, he was half lifted off his feet and sent staggering backward, and with the third, he spun and swayed and almost fell.
The hero with the flashlight had thrown it aside and had fallen to the deck to get out of the line of fire.
The tooth-spitter was still sitting on the puddled concrete, legs splayed in an infantile posture, hands clasped to his head. He was apparently frozen in terror.
Edging away from the patio table, toward Del and Scootie, Tommy remained riveted by the wounded Samaritan who was turned half away from them, who had taken three rounds from the .44 Magnum, who swayed but did not drop, did not drop.
Did. Not. Drop.
The hood was no longer over the fat man's head, but the darkness still masked the side of his face. Then he slowly turned toward Tommy and Del, and though his features remained obscure, his extraordinary eyes fixed on them and on the growling Labrador. They were radiant, green, inhuman eyes.
Scootie's growl degenerated into a whimper, and Tommy knew exactly how he felt.
With admirable calm, made of sterner stuff than either Tommy or Scootie, Del squeezed off shot after shot with the Desert Eagle. The explosions crashed across the harbour and echoed off the far shore, and they were still echoing back and forth after she had emptied the magazine.
Every round appeared to hit the fat man, because he jerked, twitched, doubled over but then snapped upright as if in response to the impact of another slug, executed a limb-flapping marionette-like spin, and at last went down. He landed on one side, knees drawn up in the foetal position, and the frosty beam of the would-be hero's flashlight, which lay discarded on the patio, illuminated one of the Samaritan's white, thick-fingered hands. He seemed to be dead, but certainly was not.
'Let's get out of here,' Del said.
Scootie was already leaping across a hedge, into the backyard of the next house to the west.
The roar of the .44 Magnum had been so daunting that most of the barking dogs along the harbour had fallen silent, no longer eager to escape their pens.
In the silvery beam of the flashlight, the Samaritan's plump white hand lay cupped, palm up, filling with rain. Then it spasmed, and the pale flesh grew mottled and dark.
'Oh, shit,' Tommy said.
Impossibly, the fingers metamorphosed into spatulate tentacles and then into spiky insectile digits with wicked chitinous hooks at each knuckle.
The entire shadowed mass of the fallen Samaritan seemed to be shifting, pulsating. Changing.
'Seen enough, outta here,' Del declared, and she hurried after Scootie.
Tommy searched for the courage to approach the creature and fire the shotgun pointblank into its brain. By the time that he could reach the beast, however, it might have transformed itself so radically that it would have nothing that was recognizably a head. Besides, intuitively he knew that no number of rounds from the Mossberg -or any other gun - would destroy it.
'Tommy!' Del called frantically from the patio of the house next door.
'Run, get out of here,' Tommy advised the homeowner who was prone on the concrete deck.
The man seemed traumatized by all the gunfire, confused. He started to push on to his knees, but then he must have glimpsed the shotgun, because he pleaded, 'No, don't, Jesus, don't,' and pressed flat to the deck again.
'Run, for God's sake, run, before it recovers from the shots,' Tommy urged the second man, the tooth-spitter, who continued to sit in a daze. 'Please, run.'
Heeding his own advice, he followed Del, grateful that he had not broken a leg when he'd been tackled.
In the distance, a siren wailed.
When Tommy, Del, and the dog were two properties away from the scene of the confrontation, one of the would-be heroes screamed in the night behind them.
Tommy skidded to a halt on a slate patio at a Tudor house and looked toward the cries.
Not much could be seen in the rain and murk. Shadows thrashed against the backdrop of security lights from the ultramodern house farther east. Some were decidedly strange shadows, huge and quick, jagged and jittering, but he would have been indulging his fevered imagination if he had claimed to see a monster in the night.
Now two men were screaming. Terrible screams. Blood-freezing. They shrieked as though they were being wrenched limb from limb, slit open, torn apart.
The demon would allow no witnesses.
Perhaps a sound reached Tommy of which he was only subliminally aware, a voracious chewing, or perhaps some quality of the two men's soul-curdling screams spoke to him on a primitive level and inspired racial memories of a prehistoric age when human beings had been easy prey to larger beasts, but somehow he knew that they were not merely being slaughtered; they were being devoured.
When the police arrived, they might not find much left of the victims on that patio. Perhaps nothing other than a little blood - and not even blood after a few more minutes of cleansing rain. The two men would seem to have vanished.
Tommy's stomach twisted with nausea.
If his arm hadn't still been tingling from the blow to his funny bone, if his muscles and joints hadn't ached from the fall and burned with fatigue, if he had not been shivering from the cold, he might have thought that he was in a nightmare. But he was suffering enough discomfort and pain that he had no need to pinch himself to determine if he were awake.
More than one siren cleaved the night, and they were rapidly drawing nearer.
Scootie ran, Del ran, Tommy ran once more, as one of the men stopped screaming, stopped being able to scream, and then the second man's cries choked off as well, and not a single dog was barking any more, all silenced by the scent of something otherworldly, while the harbour gradually filled with an incoming tide and the earth rotated inexorably toward dawn.