Screaming, she threw herself out of the car.
She rolled clear of the two vehicles, falling flat on her stomach while her Neon plunged into the pit and crashed to the bottom. Its taillights glared up at her from the dark.
Beside her, the van slid to a halt at the rim of the ditch. Its front tires sat inches from following her car into the murk.
Penelope looked up.
The driver looked down.
And what she saw triggered the most basic instinctual reaction of survival.
She ran.
Slashing through the weeds and bushes, she scrambled up the embankment, back onto the road. Behind her, the van’s engine revved with furious power. Its wheels spun in reverse, issuing a banshee wail as they cut into the ground.
The memory of the driver clung to her mind.
Doll’s eyes, an inner voice shrieked. Empty black doll’s eyes!
Penelope sprinted toward the gas station, cutting across the open land that separated it from the roadside. Here, off the highway, away from traffic, the rural farmland surrounding her became an ugly black wasteland in the dark.
She hit the parking lot of the gas station and raced for the entry, glancing over her shoulder before reaching the doors.
Back on the road, the van’s headlights shone on the pavement like a bloodhound’s nose pressed to a game trail.
She whirled around and dashed inside the store.
The Killer growled, clenching the steering wheel.
Judge Anderson’s vehicle had proved more cumbersome than the Killer anticipated, and that error had allowed the girl to escape.
Her strength helped her to survive, aiding her in ways that, like Mallory, she didn’t even realize. Now she ran to the building, where people waited. They couldn’t save her, no one could, but they also couldn’t be left alive to tell what they’d see when the Killer attacked. The hunt had just become a slaughter.
If only the Killer were fully healed; if only there hadn’t been the need to follow this girl so far from Mallory. Time was being wasted.
But it was all necessary.
The Killer needed strength.
And the girl, Penelope, would provide it.
Penelope ran inside the store. “Help me,” she cried.
The building appeared to be the combination of a gas station and a sporting goods retailer. The large main room housed miscellaneous food and travel supplies to the left, various hunting, fishing, and camping equipment to the right, and a three-register checkout island in the center, positioned along the front windows.
She rushed to the service counter. “You have to call the cops! There’s a fucking maniac chasing me!”
A tall American Indian man with the muscled arms of a comic book superhero stood behind the counter. He’d been tallying the purchases of another female customer prior to Penelope’s entrance and now froze in mid-acceptance of a twenty dollar bill. Both he and the woman stared at her with tense expressions, and Penelope tried to imagine what they were seeing: a sweaty girl with dirt-scuffed clothes and purple hair, shouting with each breath.
“Who’s chasing you?” the clerk asked. He handed the customer her change, allowing her to leave.
The woman made a quick exit, and Penelope pointed past her to where the van had pulled to a stop outside the parking lot’s entry. Its headlights went dark.
“That man’s trying to kill me,” she said. “He’s been following me for over an hour, and he just rammed my car off the road.”
Three other people perused the aisles of merchandise: another employee stocking shelves, and two middle-aged men looking at fishing poles. Each regarded her with expressions of uncertain curiosity.
“Damn, are you okay?” the clerk asked. He wore a dark blue, short-sleeve shirt with a red stripe down the left side and the name “Bird” embroidered in white over the right breast pocket.
“I’m fine,” Penelope cried. “Just get the cops here to arrest that asshole!”
Bird picked up a phone from beneath the counter and set it beside the register. He glanced from her to the doors. “Do you know who he is?”
“Not a clue,” Penelope replied. “He’s wearing some kind of mask.”
Bird faced the massive front windows as he dialed. “Well, he’s watching us, whoever he is. Hopefully the sheriff will get here quick enough to catch the guy.”
Penelope thanked him in a confident tone but had to hug herself to keep from shaking. Taking deep breaths, she leaned against the glass countertop and tried to relax. In the display case directly below, her reflection stared back in the polished blades of a dozen enormous hunting knives.
She straightened up.
Bird put the phone to his ear and a concerned look crossed his face. Placing the handset back in its cradle, he faced the cold storage lockers along the back wall of the store and called to the other employee. “Hey, Jason, come watch the register a sec.”
The lanky, red-haired kid trotted over. “What’s up?”
“The phone’s dead,” Bird told him.
Penelope faced him.
“Don’t worry, I’ve got a cell phone,” he assured her. “Regular lines have been up and down half a dozen times since Friday night’s thunderstorm.” He briefed Jason on the situation and told the kid to keep watch on the van. “Use the binoculars; see if you can get a license plate number. Oh, and log the counter time on the surveillance cameras,” he added, pointing to a set of security monitors. “The Sheriff will want to look at the tape. I’ll be back in a minute.”
He turned and strode toward the back corner of the store. Penelope glanced from Bird to Jason and back, then hurried after the towering tribesman. She crossed between aisles of camping equipment, following him into a small office. She reached him in time to see the man searching through a gym bag alongside the manager’s desk.
“Thanks again for all your help,” she said. “I really appreciate it.”
He nodded. “Glad to do it.”
She wanted to sit tight, believe everything was going to be okay, but one question still undermined her resolve. “What if he comes after me?” she asked.
Bird eyed her, still hunting for the phone. “Not to worry,” he replied. “We’d see him on those.” He gestured to what looked like several portable TVs immediately to her left.
Stepping farther inside the office, she spotted four monitors similar to the pair out by the registers. Along with the two cameras keeping watch on the interior of the store and the fueling area outside, an additional pair provided wide shots of the property. She spotted the van in the upper right corner of the third screen.
“So what if we do see him coming?” she prodded. “What if he comes into the store?”
The large man smiled. He leaned across the desk and produced a short-barrel revolver from one of the drawers. “One problem. Six solutions.”
She tried to emulate his level of confidence but only managed a strained grin.
He found his cell phone and flipped it open. “I doubt it’ll come to that,” he reassured her, dialing the sheriff’s office. “He hasn’t even gotten out of the—”
He trailed off in mid-sentence, staring at the phone.
“What about the phone lines, though?” she asked, again turning to the security monitors. “What if they’re not down because of the storm? What if he cut them? That would mean he’s already out there?”
Before Bird could answer, the black and white images on the screens dissolved into static. One by one, they all went out.
Penelope spun, mouth open, but stopped short at the look on Bird’s face.
She froze. “What? What’s wrong?”