Velocity. - Part 16
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Part 16

"It's my house."

When he raised the bottle to his mouth, Cottle's hands shook so badly that the gla.s.s rattled against his teeth. Whiskey dribbled down his chin.

Without wiping the spill off his face, he said, "He wants you in that chair. You try to go inside, he'll blow your brains out before you reach the door."

"What sense does that make?"

"Then he'll blow my brains out, too, because I couldn't make you listen to me."

"He won't," Billy disagreed, beginning to intuit something of the freak's perspective. "He's not ready to end it, not this way."

"What do you know? You don't know. You don't know squat."

"He's got a plan, a purpose, something that might not make sense to you or me, but it makes sense to him."

"I'm just a useless d.a.m.n drunk, but even I know you're full of c.r.a.p."

"He wants to work it all out the way he conceived it," Billy said more to himself than to Cottle, "not just end it in the middle with two head shots."

Anxiously surveying the sun-dazzled day beyond the front porch, spraying spittle as he spoke, Ralph Cottle said, "You bullheaded sonofab.i.t.c.h, will you listen to me! You don't listen!"

"I'm listening."

"More than anything, he wants things done his way. He doesn't want to talk to you. Get it? Maybe he doesn't want you to hear his voice."

That made sense if the freak was someone whom Billy knew.

Cottle said, "Or maybe he just doesn't want to listen to your bulls.h.i.t any more than I do. I don't know. If you want to answer the phone to show him who's boss, just to p.i.s.s him off, and he blows your brains out, I don't give a rat's a.s.s. But then he'll kill me, too, and you can't choose for me. You can't choose for me!"

Billy knew that his instincts were right: The freak wouldn't shoot them.

"Your five minutes are up," Cottle said worriedly, gesturing toward the watch on the railing. "Six minutes. You're past six minutes. He won't like this."

In truth, Billy didn't know the freak would hold his fire. He suspected that would be the case, intuited it, but he didn't know.

"Your time is up. Going on seven minutes. Seven minutes. He expects me to leave the porch, go inside."

Cottle's faded blue eyes were boiled in fear. He had so little to live for, yet he was desperate to live. What else is there? he had said.

"Go," Billy told him.

"What?"

"Go inside. Go to the phone."

Bolting up from his rocking chair, Cottle dropped the open pint. Several ounces of whiskey spilled from the uncapped mouth.

Cottle didn't stoop to retrieve his treasure. In fact, in his haste to get to the front door, he kicked the bottle and sent it spinning across the porch floor.

At the threshold to the house, he looked back and said, "I'm not sure how quick he'll call."

"You just remember every word he says," Billy instructed. "You remember every word exactly."

"All right, sir. I will."

"And every inflection. You remember every word and how he says it, and you come tell me."

"I will, Mr. Wiles. Every word," Cottle promised, and he went into the house.

Billy remained alone on the porch. Perhaps still in the crosshairs of a telescopic sight.

Chapter 24.

Three b.u.t.terflies, aerial geishas, danced out of the sunshine, into the porch shadows. Their silken kimonos flaring and folding and flaring in graceful swirls of color, as bashful as faces hidden behind the pleats of hand-painted fans, they fled, quick, into the brightness from which they had come. Performance.

Perhaps this was the word that defined the killer, that would lead to an explanation of his actions, and that if understood would reveal his Achilles' heel.

According to Ralph Cottle, the freak had referred to the murder of a woman and to the peeling away of her face as "the second act" in one of his "best performances."

In a.s.suming that the psychopath considered murder to be largely a thrilling game, Billy had been wrong. Sport might be part of it, but this man wasn't entirely or even primarily motivated by a perverse sense of fun.

Billy didn't quite know what to make of the word performance. Maybe to his nemesis, the world was a stage, reality was a fraud, and all was artifice.

How that view could explain this homicidal behavior-or predict it-Billy didn't know, couldn't guess. Nemesis represented wrong thinking. A nemesis was an enemy who could not be defeated. The better word was adversary. Billy had not given up hope.

With the front door standing open, the ring of the telephone would carry to the front porch. He had not heard it yet.

Lazily rocking the chair, not to make a harder target of himself, but to disguise his anxiety and thus rob the killer of the chance to take any satisfaction from it, Billy studied the nearest California live oak and then the next to the nearest.

They were huge old trees with broad canopies. Their trunks and branches looked black in the bright sun.

In those shadowy arbors, a sniper might find a crook of branches to serve as a platform to accommodate him and a tripod for his rifle.

The two nearest houses down-slope, one on this side of the road, one on the farther side, were well within the thousand-yard range. If n.o.body had been home, the freak could have broken into one of those places; he might now be at an upstairs window. Performance.

Billy was not able to think of any person in his life to whom that word had greater relevance than it did to Steve Zillis. The tavern was a stage to Steve.

Was it logical, however, that the freak, a vicious serial killer with a taste for mutilation, would have a sense of humor so simple and a concept of theater so puerile that he got a kick out of nose-shot peanuts, tongue-tied cherry stems, and jokes about dumb blondes?

Repeatedly Billy glanced at the wrist.w.a.tch on the porch railing.

Three minutes was a reasonable wait, even four. But when five pa.s.sed, that seemed to be too many.

He started to get up from the chair, but he heard Cottle's voice in memory-You can't choose for me!-and a weight of responsibility pressed him back into the rocker.

Because Billy had kept Cottle on the porch past the five-minute deadline, the freak might be playing payback, making them wait so their nerves would fray a little, to teach them not to screw with the big dog.

That thought comforted Billy for a minute. Then a more ominous possibility occurred to him.

When Cottle hadn't gone into the house promptly at the five-minute mark, when Billy had delayed two or three minutes, maybe the killer had taken the lack of punctuality to mean that Billy refused to choose a victim, which was indeed the case.

Having made that a.s.sumption, the freak might have decided that he had no reason to call Ralph Cottle. At that moment he could have picked up his rifle and walked out of the woods or away from one of the houses down-slope.

If he'd selected a victim in advance of hearing Billy's answer, which surely he had done, he might be eager to get on with his plans.

One of the people in Billy's life, the most important person, was of course Barbara, helpless in Whispering Pines.

Independent of any experience or knowledge that would justify his confidence, Billy sensed that this bizarre drama was still in the first act of three. His wretched antagonist was far from ready to conclude this performance; therefore, Barbara was not in imminent jeopardy.

If the freak knew anything about the subject of his torment-and he seemed to know a lot-he would realize that Barbara's death would instantly take all the fight out of Billy. Resistance was essential to drama. Conflict. Without Billy, there would be no act two.

He must take steps to protect Barbara. But he needed to think hard about how, and he had time to do so.

If he was wrong about that, if Barbara was next, then this world was about to become a brief and bitter purgatory before he quickly moved on to a room in h.e.l.l.

Seven minutes had pa.s.sed since Cottle had gone inside, seven and counting.

Billy got up from the rocker. His legs felt weak. He pulled the revolver from the box of Ritz crackers. He didn't care if the drunkard saw it.

At the threshold of the open door, he called out, "Cottle?" and received no reply, and said, "Cottle, d.a.m.n it."

He went into the house, crossed the living room, and stepped into the kitchen.

Ralph Cottle wasn't there. The back door stood open, and Billy knew that he had left it closed, locked.

He went out onto the back porch. Cottle wasn't there, either, nor was he in the yard. He had gone.

The phone hadn't rung, yet Cottle had gone. Maybe when the call hadn't come in, Cottle had taken the silence to be a sign that the killer judged him a failure. He could have panicked and fled.

Returning to the house, closing the door behind himself, Billy swept the kitchen with his gaze, looking for something amiss. He had no idea what that might be.

Everything seemed to be as it had been, as it should be. Uncertainty gave way to misgiving, however, and misgiving became suspicion. Cottle must have taken something, brought something, done something.

From the kitchen to the living room, to the study, Billy found nothing out of the ordinary, but in the bathroom he discovered Ralph Cottle. Dead.

Chapter 25.

Hard fluorescent light painted a film of faux frost on Cottle's open eyes.

Having pa.s.sed on rather than out, the drunk sat on the lidded seat of the toilet, leaning against the tank, head tipped back, mouth slack. Yellow rotten teeth framed a tongue that appeared milky pink and vaguely fissured from the dehydration of perpetual inebriation.

Billy stood breathless, stunned stupid, then backed out of the bathroom into the hall, staring at the corpse through the doorway.

He didn't retreat because of any stench. Cottle had not voided bowels or bladder in his death throes. He remained unkempt but not filthy-the only thing about which he had seemed to have any pride.

Billy just couldn't breathe in the bathroom, as though all the air had been sucked out of that s.p.a.ce, as though the dead man had been killed by a sudden vacuum that now threatened to suffocate Billy himself.

In the hallway, he could draw breath again. He could begin to think.

For the first time, he noticed the handle of the knife, which pinned Cottle's rumpled suit coat to him. A bright-yellow handle.

The blade had been thrust at an upward angle between the ribs on the left side, buried to the hilt. The heart had been pierced, and stopped.

Billy knew that the embedded blade measured six inches. The yellow knife belonged to him. He kept it in his angler's kit in the garage. It was a fishing knife, honed sharp to gut ba.s.s and fillet trout.

The killer had not been in the woods or in a meadow swale, or in a neighbor's house watching them through a telescopic rifle sight. That was a lie, and the drunkard had believed it.

As Cottle had approached the front porch, the freak must have entered by the back door. While Billy and his visitor had sat in the rockers, their adversary had been in the house, a few feet from them.

Billy had refused to choose someone in his life to be the next victim. As promised, the killer then made the choice with startling swiftness.

Although Cottle had been the next thing to a stranger, he was undeniably in Billy's life. And now in his house. Dead.

In less than a day and a half, in just forty-one hours, three people had been murdered. Yet this still felt to Billy like act one; perhaps it was the end of act one, but his gut instinct told him that significant developments lay ahead.

At every turn of events, he had done what seemed to be the most sensible and cautious thing, especially given his personal history.

His common sense and caution, however, played into the killer's hands. Hour by hour, Billy Wiles was drifting farther from any safe sh.o.r.e.

Down in Napa, evidence that might incriminate him had been planted in the house where Giselle Winslow had been murdered. Hairs from his shower drain. He didn't know what else.

No doubt evidence had been salted in Lanny Olsen's house, as well. For one thing, the place marker in the book under Lanny's dead hand was all but certainly a photo of Winslow, linking the crimes.

Now in his bathroom slumped a corpse from which bristled a knife that belonged to him.

Here in summer, Billy felt as if he were on an icy slope, the bottom invisible beyond a cold mist, still on his feet in a wild glissade, but gaining speed that, second by second, threatened his balance.

Initially the discovery of Cottle's corpse had shocked Billy into mental and physical immobility. Now several courses of action occurred to him, and he stood hobbled by indecision.

The worst thing he could do was act precipitately. He needed to think this through, attempt to foresee the consequences of each of his options.

He could afford no more mistakes. His freedom depended on his wits and courage. So did his survival.