"If that were the whole story it would be sensational enough. But it gets stranger. The police did a little digging themselves and have so far unearthed the skeletons of two children. They are looking for more."
"em>The police want to make it very clear that Mr. Kenton is not a suspect. He has lived in the house less than a year and the remains found in the cellar so far appear to have been there much longer."/p>
"Back to you, Chet..."
Jack surfed on, looking for mention of Eli Bellitto, but his name never came up. Where was he? What had Tara done with him? He hoped it hadn't ended quickly for him.
He clicked off the set. "The barrier must have come down some time after we left."
"Poor Lyle," Gia said. "I feel so bad that we left him to deal with this alone."
The three of them had waited together for the barrier to fall, but after an hour or so, Gia started to get the chills and shakes. Jack had needed to get her home and offered Lyle a bed for the night. Lyle told them go, he'd wait here. Jack promised to come back in the morning.
"Alone is the only way he can deal with it. We can't show our faces-at least I can't. And no reason you should. We can't add anything."
"We could be there for him. He and his brother seemed so close."
"They had their differences, I can tell you that, but there was a bond there, beyond blood. They'd been through a lot together."
"I'm glad he called in the police, though. They'll find the rest of the bodies. Then the families of those poor children will be able to bury what's left of them and have some closure."
Her gaze seemed to drift.
"Thinking of Tara's father?"
She nodded. "I wonder if burying Tara will change things for him and his son." She sighed. "Somehow I doubt it. I think they've been pushed too far off track to get back on."
"I've got an idea," Jack said. "Why don't we get out of town, say, drive up to Monticello and visit Vicky at camp?"
"But she's coming home tomorrow."
Jack knew that, but from the brightening of Gia's expression he could tell she loved the idea. After her ordeal with Tara, seeing her little girl would be just the tonic she needed.
"Even better. You and I can find a motel, stay over tonight, take her out for breakfast in the morning at this neat old-fashioned diner I know, then we'll drive her back ourselves. It'll be fun."
Gia smiled. "Okay. I think I'd like that. When do we leave?"
Jack repressed a sigh of relief. He'd been looking for a way to get up to Vicky's camp without alarming Gia. This was it. Last night, when Gia was in the shower, he'd made a couple of calls, one of them an anonymous tip to the camp warning them that one of the children-he didn't name the child-was in danger of being abducted in a custody dispute. He placed the same call to the Monticello police department, suggesting extra patrols around the camp.
With its leader dead, Bellitto's circle was a snake without a head. But even so, it wasn't enough for Jack. He wouldn't rest easy until he'd seen Vicky and placed her under his protection.
Gia too. She'd told Jack what Tara had said: It wants you dead. Who knew if Tara was telling the truth, but Jack had to assume she was. "It" could only mean the Otherness. What was it trying to do? Wipe out everyone he cared about?
That gut-wrenching thought had kept him awake most of the night. How do you fight something you can't see, that works so far behind the scenes you can never reach it?
The only thing he could think of was to circle the wagons and keep Gia and Vicky close by.
"You pack up some things while I run a few errands, and we'll get going soon as I get back. Make a day of it."
"What kind of errands?" she said, serious again.
"Just a stop by Julio's. Need to check out something with one of the regulars."
2
Jack sipped coffee at the bar and watched the TV while he waited for Barney to show. He'd put on a gray turtleneck to hide the bruises on his throat and wore sunglasses despite the bar's dim interior. Made it hard to see what was happening on the TV. Everyone around him, including Julio, was glued to the on-the-scene reports from what was being called "the house of horror."
He thought about Lyle and wondered how he was dealing with his brother's death. It left him alone for the first time in his life. Jack knew alone. He'd handled it, but he probably had a better tolerance for it than others. He wondered about Lyle's tolerance. He was tough. He'd done all right last night. Hadn't liked it, but he'd hung in there.
He'd be all right.
Bellitto. Lots more questions about him beyond where the hell he was.
Hell... yeah, if it existed, he'd be a charter member.
He'd said he was hundreds of years old and didn't seem to be lying. Could that be true? Not likely. Maybe he'd just thought he was telling the truth. Told himself he was that old for so long he'd come to believe it.
Still, Jack wondered where Tara had taken him. Down through the dirt and into the fault line? Someplace where she could toy with him for the longest time without being disturbed?
That was all right with Jack. The longer the better.
And then the question of Edward, Eli's ersatz brother. Early last night Jack had wanted to wring his neck; by the end of the evening he'd wanted to thank him. If Edward hadn't put him onto Eli, Adrian might have got to Vicky...
His mind refused to go there.
A familiar face popped through the door then and bellied up to the bar about three stools down.
"Barney!" Jack called, waving. "Sit over here. I'll buy you one."
Barney grinned and hurried over. "Never turn down a man who's in a buying mood, I always say."
He'd just got off work and needed a shave. The essence of his grimy Willie Nelson T-shirt gave advance notice of his approach and he had pretty much the quantity and quality of teeth you'd expect in a Willie fan.
"What're you having?"
"A shot of Johnny Walker Red and a pint of Heinie."
Jack nodded to Julio who laughed. "Ay, meng, what happen to your usual of Smuggler an' eight-ounce Bud."
"That's when I'm buying." Barney turned to Jack. "To what do I owe this generosity?"
"Julio tells me you recognized an older gent dropping off an envelope for me the other day."
Barney took a quick sip of his Scotch. "That was no gent, that was a priest."
Jack hadn't been expecting that one. "You mean as in Catholic priest."
"Right. That was Father Ed from St. Joseph's. You thinking of converting, Jack?"
"Not this month." Ed... well at least he hadn't lied about his first name. "You're sure it was this priest?"
"Course I'm sure. St. Joe's was my church back when I used to live down in Alphabet City. Father Edward Halloran's the pastor. Least he used to be. You mean you don't know who he is and he's leaving an envelope for you?" Grinning he lowered his voice and leaned closer. "What was it? A message from the Vatican? The Pope got a problem he needs fixed?"
Jack gave him a hard look. "How'd you know? You been reading my mail?"
Barney stiffened. "Hey, no, Jack. I wouldn't-" He stopped, then broke into another spotty grin. "You rat! Almost had me there!"
Jack slipped off the stool and clapped Barney on the back. "Thanks for the tip, my man." He waved to Julio. "Another round for Barney on my tab."