Underneath, in a childish scrawl, someone has added: IN HELL.
“Amen,” Brody says, and closes his eyes, just for a moment, to thank the only thing he truly does believe in: Luck.
It’s only when the passenger side door opens with that awful grating shriek and a horribly familiar face pokes in to grin at him that he realizes, not for the first time in his uneven life, that belief is a misguided one.
“No,” he moans and begins to hammer his fists on the steering wheel in frustration. “This isn’t happening. Goddamn it all, this isn’t happening!”
The dashboard light makes his passenger’s grin a green one as he slides into his seat. A foul smell rolls in with him. “Aw, c’mon now. Don’t you go getting yourself all worked up, friend,” Dean Martin tells him, eyes wild above sallow skin. “There’s nothing wrong here the right number can’t fix.”
“It’s done,” I tell her.
“Just like that?”
“Just like that.”
She looks doubtful. “Nothing feels different.”
“It isn’t supposed to. It’s still the same jail cell. You won’t see the difference until you try to step outside.”
She stares hard at me. “If you’ve tricked me…”
“Then I’ll be stuck with you, which wouldn’t make much sense, now would it?”
“Oh you’ll be stuck with a lot more than that, Sheriff.” The hardness doesn’t leave her eyes, which stay fixed on mine, as she steps back, slips the straps of her dress down over her narrow shoulders, and lets the drab gray dress fall soundlessly to the floor. Both of us look down. The scar, the angry welts that have kept her here, are gone, and she runs her fingers over the unmarked area, a satisfied smile on her face.
“I know what you thought,” she says. “When you saw me do this earlier. When you saw the mark. You had to struggle not to be turned on. You wanted me.”
“Seems to me,” I reply, “That it’s very important to you to believe that. Well, believe what you like as long as you’re going.”
She looks up, feigns hurt. “Is that any way to talk to a lady?”
“I wouldn’t know. I’ve never been that good at it.”
Her fingers glide over her dark erect nipples. “That’s too bad. You have no idea what I could—”
“Get going.” I have to clasp my hands on the counter to hide their shaking from her. “My part of the bargain is fulfilled. Time to fulfill yours.”
“You’re no fun at all, Sheriff. It’s no wonder everyone hated you.”
That’s a jab that hurts, and hurts deep, but I do my damndest to make sure she doesn’t see it.
“Such a waste. But I guess you’re wearing the only costume now that suits you, and that’s really all it comes down to, wouldn’t you agree?” She gives me a bow, and spits on the dress lying at her feet. “But it will get old,” she remarks, with a wink, and slowly makes her way around the bar, moves up close to me. There’s a peculiar smell from her, not entirely unpleasant, but strange and offensive all the same. Her pale hand alights on my arm. I repress a shudder. There is no appeal here; her nakedness does nothing but repulse me, and even if it didn’t, all I can think of is all she’s done, all she’s made come to pass in this town, even as I was bumbling around pretending I knew how to protect it.
Lian’s right breast brushes against my sleeve. Her fingers find my hair. “I should really kill you,” she says in a low voice. “What would what’s left of the town say if they heard I’d been hiding here all these years and didn’t go out with a bang?”
If that’s what she does, and assuming I can be killed, I’d consider it a mighty friendly gesture on her part, but of course, she knows that, and it’s not in her nature to do anyone any favors, which is why I’m certain she has no intention of leaving Milestone. I’m willing to bet those few copper pennies in my pocket that as soon as she steps outside and gets all the confirmation she needs that she’s well and truly free, she’ll raze this town and everything in it. Then maybe I’ll die, but for now, all I’m hearing is big talk from a small lady.
“But we’re friends,” she adds, perhaps because she’s had her fingers in my mind, and can taste the doubt on them. “And a friend wouldn’t do such a thing.”
I choose to take that as fear that whatever she thinks I’ve done for her will be cancelled by my death. Whatever she has in store for me, it won’t happen until she’s sure she’s off the hook. Makes me glad I took precautions.
“For a woman eager to be out of here, you’re sure taking your sweet time about it.” I draw the bottle toward me, fill up my glass and down it quickly. There’s not going to be time for another refill so I guess it’s best to get one while the going’s good. Too bad I don’t feel a damn thing. Might as well be drinking water.
“Then I guess this is sayonara,” she says, with another small bow. This time her eyes don’t leave mine, and her smile is decidedly unpleasant. She leans close; I try not to flinch. Her lips are like slugs against my cheek, her hair like catgut on my skin. When she draws back, her pupils have filled her eyes, making them look full to bursting with black ink. She moves away, toward the door, the dim light not dim enough to hide the black and blue shapes that are swimming beneath the milky pond of her skin. On the threshold, she hesitates. I can’t see her face; her back is to me, and I find myself wondering what might be running through her mind at this moment. Whether to kill me now, or later? Whether or not to trust the promise of an undead salesman? Whatever it is, it passes, and takes the tension from her shoulders with it.
Her hand finds the door, massages the wood grain as if it’s become a lover’s skin, then slides lower, lower, toward the knob, circling it playfully, letting her fingertips brush against the cold brass. A nail clinks against the metal. She’s toying with it, teasing it, as if enough foreplay could draw a reaction from a hunk of old wood. Her sigh too, comes from the mouth of a woman in the throes of passion and a ripple passes through her, but the satisfied chuckle that follows is not at all feminine, and even less human.
She grabs the knob. Giggles with delight.
“See you soon,” she says over her shoulder, as thorns begin to poke forth from her skin.
Then the creature that is Lian Su opens the door to the night.
Chapter Twenty Two
Kyle kills the engine at the bottom of the hill. He is quiet as Iris brusquely pins the Sheriff’s badge on his breast. Wearing it doesn’t feel right, and that’s to be expected. But Iris’s frosty attitude doesn’t feel right either, and he figures maybe he’ll get a chance to quiz her about that later. Right now, there isn’t time, or the breath required to force those questions out, because what he sees before him reminds him of a painting he once saw in an art magazine at the dentist’s office in Saddleback: A bunch of shadowy things flowing up a mountain toward a cabin with a single light shining in the window. He remembers wondering who in their right mind would hang something like that in their home, or even in a museum. It gave him the creeps just like the sight of it happening now in real life makes his heart slow and the hair rise to attention all over his body. But while it was too tough to make out what that dark mass in the painting was, he can see all too clearly what’s racing toward Eddie’s.