"Grateful," she scoffed. "To you? You're so smart, Mr. Fletcher. You and your clever little boy. You can take away other people's careers. You can make them work as temps and live with humiliation and fear every day of their lives."
"Just as Stevie did," said Step.
She glared at him, opened the door of her car, turned her back on him as she slipped inside.
"I keep almost feeling sorry for you," said Step. "And then you prove to me all over again that you thrive on hurting other people. That's what evil is, Mrs. Jones. That's what you are."
She hesitated before closing the door of the car, as if searching for some final, clinching retort. Then she slammed the door and started the engine. Step watched her pull out of the parking place and, with a squeal of tires, race for the street.
At least now I know who sent the record, thought Step. It wasn't from the killer, just as Douglas said. It was from a bully. It was no worse than that.
When he got inside, someone had taken his shopping cart. No doubt a store employee was carefully putting everything back on the shelves. He sighed, pulled his list out of his pocket, and started over.
One night late in September, Step was going to be alone with the children while DeAnne was making a presentation on journalkeeping at homemaking meeting. He knew he should be helping to keep the children out of her hair as she got ready to go, but he was in the middle of a complicated algorithm that wouldn't seem to go right, and he kept thinking, In a minute I'll go help.
Robbie was walking up and down the ha ll, bouncing a ball as hard as he could, a relentless thump, thump, thump that was about to drive Step crazy. Finally he couldn't stand it anymore. He got up and went into the hall to put a stop to the bouncing. At the same moment, DeAnne emerged from the bedroom in her slip, with the same mission in mind. Poor Robbie stood in the hall between them, looking in dread from one to the other.
"Sorry," he said in a small voice.
They both burst out laughing. "Just stop bouncing the ball inside the house, Road Bug," said Step.
"OK," said Robbie. "It don't bounce good on the carpet anyway."
"It doesn't bounce well," said Step.
"I know," said Robbie, puzzled. "I told you."
Half an hour after DeAnne left for the church, the phone rang. It was DeAnne. "This is going to sound stupid, Junk Man, but would you mind asking Robbie where he got that ball?"
"He's had it for years," said Step.
"But it rolled down one of the yucky holes in front of the house the first week we lived here," she said. "I want to know how it got out again. You didn't rescue it, did you?"
"I didn't even know it was lost. Maybe I could put it back."
"Step, please find out or it'll drive me crazy for the rest of my life."
He agreed, hung up, and went in search of Robbie.
"The invisible guy got it for me," said Robbie. "He said it wasn't very far down in the drain, and it came when he called it."
Step might have rebuked him for making up such a weird story, but the mention of an invisible guy gave him pause. "Where did you meet this invisible guy, Road Bug?"
"In the yard today," said Robbie. "He was naked because if he wore clothes people would see him."
"But you could see him," said Step.
"I'm your son," said Robbie, as if that explained everything.
Lee Weeks, thought Step. "How long ago was this?" asked Step. "Before or after Stevie got home from school?"
"Before," said Robbie. "He's gone now. He had to fly to Raleigh."
Step went around the house, double-checking the locks. Then he made Robbie and Stevie go into Betsy's and Zap's bedroom while he went outside.
It was nearly dark, with scant moonlight, but Step saw him almost at once, a pale ghostlike figure standing up against the neighbor's high hedge in the front yard. Step locked the front door behind him and strode toward him.
"How did you get over here with no clothes on, Lee?" he asked.
Lee laughed in delight. "I knew you'd be able to see me. Just like your son."
"You're lucky it wasn't a cop who saw you, Lee. This is called 'indecent exposure' and you go to jail for it."
In fact, though, Lee's naked body was more sad than anything, so pale, the hair making feeble shadows. "I don't appreciate you talking to my son in this condition."
"I can't help it if he has your power to see the invisible," said Lee.
"You've been palming your medicine again, I guess."
"Mother checks my hands," said Lee. "She checks my mouth. And she watches me so I don't throw it up."
"Do you hate it that much?"
"It makes me feel like I'm moving through the world in a fog," said Lee. "When I don't take it, everything gets so sharp and clear. I can see forever. And my thoughts-I can think the thoughts of God. I don't have to sleep. I haven't slept in five days."
"I can believe it," said Step, noticing that if Lee was God, then God chewed gum. "Why are you here?"
"If you're really going to be my spokesman, then you have to be tested."
"I'm not going to be your spokesman, Lee. Where are your clothes?"
"Those are the robes of my captivity," he said. "I never had clothing."
"Yeah, well, they don't fit your mother."
"My mother likes you," said Lee. "She thinks you're really smart."
"How nice."
"But she says you don't like woman psychiatrists."
"She's mistaken," said Step.
"Oh, you don't have to pretend. I don't like them either. They're so bossy. And they don't understand what it's like. They've got their drugs to turn you into a robot, when you're just this close to seeing it all. To getting the whole picture."
The picture I need right now, thought Step, is how to get you safely back into your mother's care without endangering my family and preferably without bringing in the police. "We never get the whole picture in this life, Lee."
"I do," said Lee. "I see that you're planning to call my mother."
"Of course I am," said Step. "You need your medicine."
"Never again. I'm going to go seven days without sleeping and on the seventh day I'll come into my full power. It's sleep that dulls our minds, you know. I almost made it once before. I was driving along in that jet-black Z and I knew that all I had to do was just lean back to the right angle in my seat and I could fly anywhere. It was God in me. I wish I'd done it, Step. But the police wouldn't listen to me. The guy from the car lot must have called them. He didn't understand that it was my car now. I drove exactly fifty- five, so the policemen wouldn't stop me. But they have no respect for the law. They knew they had to stop me before I began to fly. They cut me off, about five or six police cars, and I got out of the car when they told me but they made me lie down on the road and the gravel got into my face and it really hurt." His voice went high at the end. A kind of whimper, a childlike cry. It made Step think of Howie Mandel's little-kid voice, small and high.
It was funny when Mandel did it.
"That was the time I was in the hospital. I told them, I can't stand to be confined. But they strapped me down anyway, it's this kind of straitjacket for when you're lying on the table. You can, like, lift one arm, but if you do, it tightens down the straps on all the others, including the one around your throat. So if you move your arms both at once you can choke yourself. And I kept thinking, what if I fall off the table? I'll strangle here and they won't do anything because they're jealous of me and they want me to die without ever coming into my power."
"I think they were trying to help you, Lee."
"It was killing me. So I started screaming, I don't like this, I don't like this, over and over but when the guy finally came in he just tightened it more so I couldn't even move one arm anymore and he said, We won't loosen this until you show us that you're in control of yourself, and I said How can I be in control of myself when you've tied me up? You've got to let me stand up, I won't go anywhere, I promise, and he says Yeah right. And then Mom got there and she had the medicine again but when she tried to give it to me I threw up right on her."