Выбрать главу

The briefing finished, Giselle allowed herself a silent moment of contemplation. She looked at Ms. Wickman’s corpse and felt a tingle, a ghost of the powerful erotic charge that had flowed through her own body during their brief but electric coupling. That tingle intensified and Giselle became keenly aware of an awakened taste that had not yet been sated.

“Tell me, Lieutenant. You are no doubt familiar with all the Apprentices in service here. Of the females, whom would you say is the most beautiful?”

Schreck’s answer was immediate. “That would be Ursula, Mistress.”

“Have someone fetch her for me. But first…” Giselle turned her head to look at the open French door and the red sky beyond. “Have this cunt’s body taken to that barren place and burned. I would like to watch this happen from my balcony.”

“As you wish, Mistress.”

She dismissed him then and he departed the room at once. Giselle again arose from the bed and ventured back out to the balcony. She observed the diminutive forms of the hooded, toiling slaves and thought of what Schreck had told her about the edifice they were constructing.

An actual pyramid, she thought, wonderment again filling her as she imagined it.

She smiled again.

She couldn’t imagine a more appropriate place for the sacrifices to come.

PART II:

THE CRIMSON HIGHWAY

CHAPTER ELEVEN

One month later

The strange little girl in the yellow rain slicker was looking at her again. Laughing at her again. The girl made her nervous. She had a weird glint in her eyes. And there was something about the set of her features and the angle at which she was holding her head that made her expression look like a grown-up leer. A hint of lasciviousness one shouldn’t see in the eyes of one so young. Though Dream couldn’t hear the sound of the girl’s laughter over the wind and the rushing water below, she was certain it possessed a mocking tone.

She wasn’t positive the little girl was really there. Another apparition, maybe. She was glad of the dozen or so yards that separated them. If she moved any closer, Dream would bolt back across the bridge to the parking lot where they’d left Marcy’s van. The girl put a cupped hand to her mouth to cover a giggle.

Dream shifted her attention back to the natural wonder in the distance. The stiff breeze stirred her hair and the fine mist of rain made her flesh glisten as she leaned over the railing of the Rainbow Bridge and watched the distant churning foam of the water at the bottom of American Falls, the U.S. half of the famed Niagara Falls. The sky was overcast and the temperature had dropped into the thirties, with the stiffening wind adding an extra bite to the chill. It was late afternoon drifting toward evening, and the already bruised sky was growing darker by the moment. The nasty conditions had thinned the usual tourist crowds to nearly nothing. Dream had an eerie sense of standing alone at the very edge of the world as all of existence teetered on the brink of some unfathomable apocalypse.

Dream shivered as the swirling wind abruptly redirected and gusted across her wet face. She tucked her hands under her arms and wished for better protection against the elements than the light jacket she was wearing. She leaned further over the railing and looked at the rushing stream of water directly beneath the Rainbow Bridge. An image leapt unbidden to her mind then, one that stirred horror within her, but was not without a certain morbid appeal. She imagined herself climbing over the slick railing and leaping spread-eagled into the drink, her arms outstretched as she soared for one glorious moment before plunging into the cold, cold water and the darkness beyond.

“It’s tempting, isn’t it?”

Dream flinched at the sound of Marcy’s voice. The fragile—but achingly vivid—illusion of perfect aloneness was wrecked again. On the other hand, there was a measure of comfort to be derived from the proximity of an undeniably flesh-and-blood human being. Dream considered asking Marcy whether she could see the girl in the yellow rain slicker, but decided against it when she realized she wasn’t certain which would unsettle her more, a yes or no answer.

Marcy took up a position a few feet to her left and leaned over the railing. The wind blew her bottle-blonde hair wildly about her face, but she seemed oblivious to the conditions. She glanced down before looking at Dream again. “I kind of wish I had the guts to do it. Just climb over and…jump.” Her tone turned wistful as her gaze was drawn back to the water. “It would solve a lot of problems.”

Dream sighed and finally acknowledged her presence. “So do it. I won’t stop you, I promise.”

Marcy grunted. “If you hate me so much, why don’t you just kill me? Make my brain explode like you did to my friend. Or have your freaky zombie friend rip my head off or something.”

Anger stirred within Dream as she listened to Marcy rant. The girl had been nearly as silent as her meek little sister during their first days on the road, but in the last week she’d grown increasingly bold with her verbal jabs. Dream knew she was testing her, probing to see just how far she could push. She was treading a very thin line. The pressure building within Dream was immense. It wouldn’t take much to trigger an explosion. And she had a feeling her next explosion might wipe out anyone within range.

Dream shivered again and looked at Marcy. “That thing isn’t my friend. Not really.”

Marcy smirked. “That’s not what she says. She says—”

“I know what she says.” Dream turned away from the railing and leaned close to Marcy. She caught a glimpse of Alicia over Marcy’s shoulder. The black woman was standing at a spot some twenty yards to the left, her gaze trained on the waterfall. “And maybe she even believes it. But she’s not Alicia. She’s not even Alicia’s ghost. There may be some little strand of Alicia’s essence inside her, something some part of my subconscious always carries with me. If anything, she’s some kind of fucked-up clone or copy. There’s a lot of what I remember about Alicia in that…thing, but it’s all distorted.” She frowned. “I don’t know how to put it exactly.”

Marcy’s brow furrowed. “Like a garbled data transmission, then? Static or interference causing some information to be left out and other bits of it scrambled all to hell.”

Dream shrugged. “Something like that, I guess.”

Marcy nodded. “Yeah. The supernatural gumbo inside you created a shell based on your last memories of Alicia, then downloaded a faulty blueprint of her psyche to her regenerated brain.” She laughed and shook her head. “It’s all very late night Z-movie. Not sure I believe it, but I guess it makes at least as much sense as the idea of a genuine walking corpse.”

Dream didn’t respond to that. She looked over Marcy’s shoulder again at Alicia. The slinky cocktail dress had been traded in for jeans, a long-sleeved thermal shirt, and a light jacket similar to the one worn by Dream. She looked almost normal now. And it wasn’t just because of the clothes. The wounds and corpse bloat were still there, if you looked close enough, but these things were fading, the open, weeping razor incisions closing and becoming scars. Every day she looked a little better, and Dream suspected she would soon be fully restored. Her improvement was disconcerting, although it wasn’t as unsettling as the realization that other people could see the dead woman now. It reduced the likelihood that she was hallucinating or losing her mind, a scenario that bothered her far less than the idea of having actually conjured Alicia into being through some unconscious use of raw magic. A vision of the girl in the yellow rain slicker formed in her mind then, and Dream was again made to consider the possibility that if she could perform the feat of creation once, then she could surely do it again.