"Or one o'clock in California. No doubt after or before she took the drugs. She didn't leave a note, but she phoned you."
"She gave no indication – "
"She mentioned you quite often. She was morbidly attracted to you. She had an extreme, unhealthy certainty that she was telepathic, that you put her voice inside her mind."
"I know that! Was she paranoid or homicidal?"
"Mr. Ingram, I've already said too much. Although she's dead, I can't violate her confidence."
"But I don't think she's dead."
"I beg your pardon."
"If she died on Thursday night, then tell me how she phoned again on Friday night?"
The line hummed. I sensed the doctor's hesitation. "Mr. Ingram, you're upset. You don't know what you're saying. You've confused the nights."
"I'm telling you she called again on Friday!"
"And I'm telling you she died on Thursday. Either someone's tricking you, or else…" The doctor swallowed with discomfort.
"Or?" I trembled. "I'm the one who's hearing voices?"
"Mr. Ingram, don't upset yourself. You're honestly confused."
I slowly put the phone down, terrified. "I'm sure I heard her voice."
That night, Sam called again. At three a.m. From Salt Lake City. When I handed Jean the phone, all she heard was the dial tone.
"But you know the goddamn phone rang!" I insisted.
"Maybe a short circuit. Chuck, I'm telling you there was no one on the line."
Then Sunday. Three a.m. Cheyenne, Wyoming. Coming closer. But she couldn't be if she was dead.
The student newspaper at the University subscribes to all the other major student newspapers. Monday, Jean and I took the children with us and drove to its office. Friday's copy of the Berkeley campus newspaper had arrived. In desperation, I searched its pages. "There!" A two-inch item. Sudden student death. Samantha Perry. Tactfully, no cause was given.
Outside in the parking lot, Jean said, "Now do you believe she's dead?"
"Then tell me why I hear her voice! I've got to be crazy if I think I hear a corpse!"
"You're feeling guilty that she killed herself because of you. You shouldn't. There was nothing you could do to stop her. You've been losing too much sleep. Your imagination's taking over."
"You admit you heard the phone ring!"
"Yes, it's true. I can't explain that. If the phone's broken, we'll have it fixed. To put your mind at rest, we'll get a new, unlisted number."
I felt better. After several drinks, I even got some sleep.
But Monday night, again the phone rang. Three a.m. I jerked awake. Cringing, I insisted that Jean answer it. But she heard just the dial tone. I grabbed the phone. Of course, I heard Sam's voice.
"I'm almost there. I'll hurry. I'm in Omaha."
"This number isn't listed!"
"But you told me the new one. Your wife's the one who changed it. She's trying to keep us apart. I'll make her sorry. Darling, I can't wait to be with you."
I screamed. Jean jerked away from me.
"Sam, you've got to stop!" I shouted into the phone. "I spoke to Dr. Campbell!"
"No. He wouldn't dare. He wouldn't violate my trust."
"He told me you were dead!"
"I couldn't live without you. Soon we'll be together."
My shrieks woke the children. I was so hysterical that Jean had to call for an ambulance. Two attendants struggled to sedate me.
Omaha was one day's drive from where we live. Jean came to visit me in the hospital on Tuesday.
"Are you feeling better?" She frowned at the restraints that held me down.
"Please, you have to humor me," I said. "All right? Suspect I've gone crazy, but for God's sake, humor me. I can't prove what I'm thinking, but I know you're in danger. I am, too. You have to get the children and leave town. You have to hide somewhere. Tonight at three a.m., she'll reach the house."
Jean studied me with pity.
"Promise me!" I said.
Jean saw the anguish on my face and nodded.
"Maybe she won't try the house," I said. "She seems to know everything. She might know I'm in the hospital. She might come here. I have to get away. I'm not sure how, but later, when you're gone, I'll find a way to get out of these restraints."
Jean peered at me, distressed. Her voice sounded totally discouraged. "Chuck."
"I'll check the house. If you're still there, you'll make me more upset."
"I promise. I'll take Susan and Rebecca. We'll drive somewhere."
"I love you."
Jean began to cry. "I won't know where you are."
"If I survive this, I'll get word to you."
"But how?"
"The English department. I'll leave a message with the secretary."
Jean leaned down to kiss me, crying, certain I'd lost my mind.
I reached the house shortly after dark. As Jean had promised, she'd left with the children. I got in my sports car and raced to the Interstate.
A Chicago hotel where at three a.m. Sam phoned from Iowa City. She'd heard my voice. She said I'd told her where I was. She was hurt and angry. "Tell me why you're running."
I fled from Chicago in the middle of the night, driving until I absolutely had to rest. I checked in here at one a.m. In Johnstown, Pennsylvania. I can't sleep. I've got an awful feeling. Last night Sam repeated, "Soon you'll join me." In the desk, I found this stationery.
God, it's three a.m. I pray that I'll see the sun come up.
It's almost four. She didn't phone. I can't believe I escaped. I keep staring at the phone.
It's four. Dear Christ, I hear the ringing.
Finally I've realized. Sam killed herself at one. In Iowa, the time zone difference made it three. But I'm in Pennsylvania. In the east. A different time zone. One o'clock in California would be four o'clock, not three, in Pennsylvania.
Now.
The ringing persists. But I've realized something else. This hotel's unusual, designed to seem like a home.
The ringing?
God help me, it isn't the phone. It's the doorbell.
As I mentioned in my note for "But at My Back I Always Hear," there is something about the flat, wide, open spaces of the Midwest that can cause fright as much as awe. When I lived in Pennsylvania, I thought I knew how bad a thunderstorm could be. But no weather there prepared me for the terror of an Iowa thunderstorm. As a character in this story points out, some Iowa storms can be seven miles high. When the weather forecasters announce a thunderstorm warning, you pay attention. Green skies. Eighty-mile-an-hour winds. Look out. One summer, lightning struck my house three times. In the middle of the night, while I lay in bed awake, feeling thunder shake the windows, I decided to write a story about it. "The Storm" was included in The Year's Best Fantasy Stories for 1984.
The Storm
Gail saw it first. She came from the Howard Johnsons toward the heat haze in the parking lot where our son, Jeff, and I were hefting luggage into our station wagon. Actually, Jeff supervised. He gave me his excited ten-year-old advice about the best place for this suitcase and that knapsack. Grinning at his sun-bleached hair and nut-brown freckled face, I told him I could never have done the job without him.