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"Why? Because he's a child killer and he's got more to hide than we do? Maybe. But we're taking him to my my house, not yours. He'll know where house, not yours. He'll know where I I live, not-" live, not-"
"Won't matter what he knows."
"It'll matter to me, d.a.m.n it."
Jack looked at him, his eyes colder and darker than ever, and spoke very slowly. "It... won't... matter."
The full meaning of the words struck Lyle like a runaway D train.
"Hey, listen, Jack, I don't think I want to be part of-"
Jack turned away. "You won't be. Not your problem. Come on. Let's bag this mutant."
Jack started down the stairs. Lyle held back, weighted down by the cold lump of lead that had formed in his stomach. But the thought of Charlie spurred him to follow.
At the bottom of the stairwell they entered a dark hallway lined with a number of doors, all closed. No light seeped around them. Cooler here. Air-conditioning doing its job. The smell of fried onions in the air. Light filtered up from a stairway at its far end, and with it the sound of canned laughter-a sit-com on the TV.
Jack handed the bag to Lyle and moved toward the stairs with his pistol before him. Lyle followed. At the top step he motioned Lyle to wait, then he descended the stairs one at a time with excruciating slowness, keeping his sneakered feet against the wall at the very edge of each tread. He reached the bottom and disappeared for a moment, then returned to motion Lyle down. Walking in his socks-his noisy leather-soled shoes were stowed in the gym bag-Lyle followed Jack's example, staying near the wall end of the treads.
At the bottom he looked around. They stood in a small, spare dining room. Dinner plates still cluttered the mahogany table. The kitchen to the left, and another room beside it; Lyle guessed from the glowing computer screen that it was some sort of office. The living room lay to the right; the TV sounds came from there.
Lyle jumped as a phone rang in the office. He looked to Jack to see what to do but Jack was already moving like a cat toward the living room. He reached the entrance at the same time another man dressed in gray suit pants and a white shirt with French cuffs came out. He was older, a six-footer with pale skin and dark receding hair, and he was moving carefully, as if movement was uncomfortable. This had to be the man they'd come for, the Eli Bellitto Jack had told him about.
Jack shoved the silencer under the man's chin and grabbed a handful of hair at the back of his head, yanking it back to expose his throat.
"h.e.l.lo, Eli," he said in a low, harsh voice. "Molest any little boys today?"
Lyle didn't think he'd ever seen anyone more terrified. The man looked ready to collapse from shock and fear as Jack backed him into the living room.
"W-what? How-?"
Lyle, still carrying the gym bag, followed at a distance. In the living room a big Sony-a thirty-something-incher-was playing a Seinfeld Seinfeld rerun. rerun.
"Down! On the floor!"
Bellitto's face twisted in pain as Jack kicked the back of his knees, sending him down to a praying position.
"No! Please! I'm hurt!"
The Seinfeld Seinfeld audience laughed. audience laughed.
"That's the least of your worries," Jack said, his voice still low.
He pushed Bellitto face down on the bare hardwood floor, then half straddled him, pressing a knee into the small of his back. Bellitto groaned in pain.
Lyle kept reminding himself that this creep had killed Tara Portman and who knew how many other kids, and that Jack was closer to this situation than he-after all, he'd seen the guy s.n.a.t.c.h a kid firsthand. He was playing rough, but if anyone deserved it...
Jack pulled a short strip of duct tape from his shirt and slapped it over the man's mouth. Then he looked up at Lyle.
"Over here."
Lyle hesitated, then approached. Jack handed him the pistol.
He winked at Lyle. "He tries anything cute, shoot him in the a.s.s."
The Seinfeld Seinfeld audience laughed again. audience laughed again.
"Yeah." Lyle cleared his throat. His saliva felt like glue. "Sure thing. Which cheek?"
Jack smiled-a quick one, the first Lyle had seen tonight-and gave him a thumbs up. Then he pulled Bellitto's arms back and used the longer strips of tape to bind his hands. He stood and held out his hand; Lyle gladly returned him the pistol.
"One down." Jack looked around. "Maybe one more to go. Maybe not."
Lyle hoped not. Barely thirty seconds had pa.s.sed since the phone ring, but in that brief period he knew he'd gone from flimflam man to cla.s.s-A or -B felon. He wasn't made for the rough-and-tumble scene, for guns and violence. It had him shaking from his fingernails to his spine.
Jack gestured with his pistol toward Bellitto. "Help me get him up."
They each grabbed the trussed man under an arm and lifted him into a soft, cream-colored chair. Bellitto winced in pain but Jack seemed unmoved.
Lyle grabbed his shoes from the gym bag and slipped them on. No further need for stealth that he could see, and it felt good to have something on his feet again besides socks.
"Anybody else here, Eli?"
When Bellitto didn't respond Jack leaned close, grabbed his hair, and pulled his head up so that they were nose to nose.
"Where's your buddy Minkin? Is he around? You can nod or shake, Eli. Now Now."
Bellitto shook his head.
"You expecting him or anyone soon?"
Another head shake.
Jack shoved him back. "Right. Like I'd believe you." He turned to Lyle. "Get out your sap and stay close to him. He tries to get up, clock him down."
Lyle didn't want to be left alone here with this man. "Where're you going?"
"To check the other rooms. Just to be sure. I've got this bad feeling Minkin's hiding someplace, maybe upstairs. I don't want to leave him behind if he's here. And while I'm at it, I'll see if I can find something to wrap up this garbage." He looked around the bare living room. "Jeez, Eli. You ever hear of a rug?"
As Jack stalked away, pistol at ready, Lyle pulled the sap from his pocket and took a position behind Bellitto where he wouldn't have to see his cold eyes. He was glad the man's mouth was taped so he couldn't talk or plead. Did he have any idea this was his last night alive?
Suddenly Lyle heard a hoa.r.s.e cry-Jack's voice-echo from the other end of the house.
Oh, s.h.i.t, what now?
He tightened his sweaty grip on the handle of the sap as his heartbeat lunged into triple time. d.a.m.n, he should have taken that gun when Jack offered it.
And then Jack flew into the room, face white, teeth bared, the pistol in one hand, a sheet of paper in the other.
Lyle cringed at the look in his eyes. He hadn't thought a human could look like that-like death itself.
He jumped back as Jack backhanded the pistol across Bellitto's head and held the paper before him.
"What is is this? Who sent it?" He dropped the sheet into Bellitto's lap and ripped the tape from his mouth, then he lowered the pistol till the muzzle was poised over one of the man's legs. " this? Who sent it?" He dropped the sheet into Bellitto's lap and ripped the tape from his mouth, then he lowered the pistol till the muzzle was poised over one of the man's legs. "Now, Bellitto, or I start sending your knees to h.e.l.l, one piece at a time till I hear what I want!"
13.
"Much as I'd like to see Jack," Charlie said, "I hope he don't pop in right now. This might be just a leetle hard to explain."
Gia laughed. "I wouldn't even bother. I'd just get on his case about what took him so long."
Gia's feet rested in a foothold about four feet off the floor of their prison and her arm ached as she dug a new hole above her head in the dirt wall. Charlie was behind and below her, holding her in place by pushing against the backs of her upper thighs. He'd dug out the first four holes in record time-the ability to do something to help them out had galvanized him into a digging machine-stretching as far as he could for the last; then it was Gia's turn. Somebody needed to use the foot- and handholds to dig the next ones. Since she was smaller and lighter, it was easier for Charlie to hold her up.
"G.o.d, this dirt is hard."
She kept her eyes closed and her face averted to avoid the loose earth that rained down as she stabbed the cross into the wall. She was covered with dirt; her short blond hair was especially full of it; she felt gritty and grimy, but she kept jabbing away. They were making progress, they were getting out.
The cross clunked against something in the hole. Another swing, another clunk, with very little dirt falling out.
"Uh-oh. I think I'm up against a rock."
"You got it deep enough for a foot yet?"
Gia gauged the opening to be three inches deep, tops. "Not yet."
"See if you can dig around it."
"What if it's too big?"
She felt Charlie shift behind her.
"Here. Stand on my shoulders and see if you can get a look. If it too big we shift the hole to one side. If it ain't, see if you can yank it out."
"You're sure?"
"Do it. Just don't go droppin' it on my dome."
Clinging to the shallow depression she'd been digging, Gia lifted one hesitant foot onto Charlie's shoulder, then the other. Straightening her knees, she raised her head to the level of the hole and looked in- -to find the empty sockets of a child's skull staring back at her.
Gia let out a scream of shock and revulsion and lurched back. She lost her grip and started to fall. Terrified, she nailed her arms about but could find nothing to hold on to. Somehow Charlie managed to catch her and save her from injury.
"What's wrong?"
Gia sobbed. "A child's skeleton. Maybe Tara herself. I hate this!" she shouted, letting the tears flow. She thought of Vicky, how except for luck that might have been her skull. "This shouldn't happen to anyone, especially not a child!" She wiped at her tears and the back of her hand came away muddy. "What kind of monster-?"
The ground shook then. Just a little, but enough to bring her around.
Charlie was turning, looking up at the surrounding walls. "You feel that?"
Gia nodded. "I sure-"
A section of the wall near the top broke free then and tumbled onto them. Gia coughed and gagged as she inhaled a cloud of dirt. Another load of earth landed on her back, knocking her to her knees.
"It's collapsing! We'll be buried!"
The cascade continued as Charlie grabbed her arm and pulled her to her feet. "Keep moving your legs! Stay on top of it as it falls!"
It was like being under a dirt waterfall, but Gia saw what he meant. As long as too much didn't fall at once, they had a chance of- She cried out as something cold wrapped around her ankle. She looked down and saw a small hand, ghostly pale, clutching her. She tried to tug away but couldn't break free. The little fingers held fast, like a steel manacle.
Charlie gave a shout. Gia turned to see a similar hand gripping his foot. The dirt was starting to pile up around them and his expression was frantic as he tried to yank free.
"It's Tara!"
Charlie stared at her. "Why? We never did nothin' to her."
"Tara!" Gia cried, still trying to pull free from the relentless grip on her ankle. "Tara, stop it! We're not your enemy!"
She still clutched the cross. In desperation she swung it at the little hand, striking it just above the wrist. It sliced through the ghost flesh with no more resistance than air, and then...
The hand disappeared. She was free.
"Charlie! The cross! It breaks her grip!"
Charlie's ankle was buried. Gia crouched beside him and dug through the dirt till she saw the hand. She rammed the cross against it and the hand disappeared.
"Praise Jesus!" Charlie cried as he jumped away from the spot where he'd been held. "Nothing can stand against the power of His cross!"
But just then she felt another hand grab her left ankle, and still another grab her right. She glanced at Charlie and saw that a pair of arms had snaked out of the wall to trap his lower legs.
The dirtfall doubled in volume.
Gia didn't hesitate. She slashed at one little hand and then the other. As soon as their grip was broken she lurched across the pit to help Charlie. She slipped and the weight of the falling dirt knocked her flat. For one panic-seared moment she thought she'd never get up, but she forced herself to her feet and reached Charlie's side. Choking and gasping, she slashed at the hands. But no sooner was he free than they both were gripped again-by three or four hands each this time.
"She's like a hydra!" Gia shouted as she cut at the new hands-hers and Charlie's-but new ones appeared as soon as she severed the old ones.
"Don't know 'bout no hydras," Charlie said, his voice thick. "But I don't see us gettin' outta this alive. Leastways not together."
Gia glanced at him. His expression looked stricken, as if he were about to cry.
"It's okay, Charlie. We'll make it. We've just got to keep-"