She could take the gun instead of the cross.
And do what with it? Blow Kramer away? Make him confess, first. It’ll all be on videotape.
I can’t.
I don’t have to, she suddenly realized. She’d made the phone call to Riley. Right now he was probably waiting in Kramer’s house eager to nail the bastard for murdering Jessica.
I’ll be in the clear. He’ll be dead, and nobody will ever have to find out what he did to me.
If Riley doesn’t botch it.
He won’t.
Leaving her room, Lane decided to go ahead and use the toilet. She went to the end of the hall, turned on the bathroom light and shut the door. She locked it just in case Kramer might decide to come back, after all. She took out the crucifix, set it down by the sink, lowered her corduroys and panties and sat on the toilet.
Maybe I should just stay here, she thought.
She finished, dried herself, and didn’t get up.
Just stay here, and I’ll never have to see Kramer again. I can read about him tomorrow in the newspaper. Buford High School English teacher brutally slain in his home.
Nobody will ever know what he did to me.
Unless they get Riley for it. Then I’d have to testify for him.
Maybe that won’t happen. Maybe it’ll just go unsolved forever, and Mom and Dad will never have to know.
Lane wondered if they were waiting for her. They might not pull the stake until she was there. Maybe they would send someone in to get her. Maybe Kramer would volunteer.
He can’t get me with the door locked.
Hell, anybodycould unlock the damn thing. All it takes is something that’ll fit into the keyhole. You could almost do it with a fingernail.
Besides, I should be there for Dad.
With the crucifix tucked into the front of her corduroys and out of sight under the draping shirt, Lane left the bathroom. She walked slowly down the hallway. No need to hurry. The longer she took, the less time she would have to spend in the presence of Kramer.
Not that it had been too bad, being around him tonight. With all the others in the same room, he didn’t seem very threatening. Or maybe he didn’t seem so threatening because she knew what was waiting for him.
He was a dead man. He just didn’t know it yet.
In the kitchen Lane rolled open the sliding door. She stepped outside and pulled it shut. The wind swept her hair back. Though it fluttered the front of her shirt, the T-shirt underneath kept her from feeling much chill. She walked toward the driveway.
The garage door had been pulled back no more than four or five feet. Light spilled out onto the pavement, but she couldn’t see anyone inside until she stepped through the opening.
Dad was squatting on the other side of the coffin, his hand inside, gripping the stake. The others were watching him. Pete had the camera on him.
Hal had an arrow aimed at him. At Dad.
“No!” she yelled.
Dad looked confused. Everyone else whirled around as she ran at Kramer, shouting, “You bastard!” Even as the words left her mouth, she realized her mistake. Kramer hadn’t been about to shoot Dad; the arrow was meant for the vampire. You blew it, she thought.
She saw shock in Kramer’s eyes. He yanked back the bowstring. Barbara rammed an elbow into his side at the same instant he released the string. The arrow zipped past Lane, missing her right arm by less than an inch.
Almost on him, Lane hunched down. The top of her head struck the bow, knocked it aside, and rammed Kramer in the chest. He staggered backward. She wrapped her arms around him. She heard shouts of alarm. A knee punched into her belly, striking the crucifix and driving it against her skin, lifting her off her feet. Kramer’s arms went under her. He swung her sideways and let go.
She hit the floor rolling, the concrete pounding her bones, the crucifix falling out of her shirt. She came to a stop on her back. Breathless, she struggled to sit up. Kramer’s knee had blasted out her strength. She could lift her head, but that was all.
Dad, a look of shock on his face, still squatted behind the coffin as if frozen. Barbara was down on her back. Mom was behind Kramer, an arm clamped across his throat, riding him, swinging as he spun around and slashed at Pete with his straight razor. Pete thrust the camera out, blocking the blade.
Lane shoved at the floor. This time she managed to sit up. She got to her feet.
“Stay put!” Dad’s voice boomed.
She looked at him.
Their eyes locked. Lane had no breath to tell him what Kramer had done to her. But Dad seemed to know.
His eyes lowered.
And Lane saw him begin to rise from his crouch, his face twisting with rage, lips peeling back from his teeth, left hand shoving down against Bonnie’s chest as he rose, right hand drawing out the stake. It came out, a long shaft of wood, stained dark just below his grip, tapering to a point. Like a madman with a butcher knife, he bounded over the coffin yelling, and rushed Kramer.
Mom had lost her chokehold. She was on her knees behind Kramer, hugging his thighs. Barbara was scurrying toward the quiver of arrows. Pete took a slash across the chest as he brought the camera down with both hands, crashing it against Kramer’s face.
The blow knocked the teacher’s head back. He waved his arms, fighting for balance, about to topple over Mom.
Dad punched the stake into his throat.
Kramer’s knees folded. His rump hit Mom’s back, driving her to the floor. Dad, still clutching the embedded stake, went down to his knees. Snarling, he put his other hand to work. He used them both, shoving down and working the stake deeper into the man’s throat.
Kramer kicked and twitched and flapped his arms. Blood gurgled up around the stake. His eyes bulged as if they might explode from his head. His mouth gaped, tongue stretched out and jerking as he made gagging noises.
Then came a violent spasm that seemed to shake the last of Kramer’s life out of his body. He sagged. Lane heard a soft fart. A stench of excrement came, and she covered her nose and mouth.
Dad, using the stake like a handle, dragged Kramer’s body off Mom.
He left it in the man’s throat and straightened up, gasping for air. He looked at his dripping hands. Then he looked at Pete. “Are you okay?”
Pete was holding his bloody chest, staring down at himself, shaking his head.
Barbara held an arrow in each hand. She let go, and they clattered against the floor. She put an arm around Pete’s back. “God, honey.”
“Are youokay?” Pete asked her.
“Just had my wind knocked out.”
“Jean?” Dad asked.
Mom was on her knees, staring at the body. Instead of answering, she got up. She lifted her arms toward Lane. She had tears in her eyes and her nose was runny, but she didn’t look hurt. Lane stepped closer, and they embraced.
“What did he do to you?” Mom asked.
“He hurt me,” Lane said, making sure her voice was loud enough for everyone to hear. “He raped me. After the play Saturday night. He’s the one who murdered Jessica Patterson and her parents. He said he’d kill us, too, if I told on him.”
“Oh my God,” Barbara murmured. “You poor kid.”
“Fuckin‘ bastard,” Pete said. Lane heard a quick thud. Someone kicking Kramer?
She heard footsteps. Then Dad pressed against her back. His arms went around Mom, and Lane was enclosed between their bodies. She felt Dad’s breath stirring her hair, warm against her scalp.
“Our pal Bonnie didn’t come out of it,” Pete said.
Turning her head, Lane saw the dark cadaver stretched out motionless in its coffin, a hole where the stake had been.
Pete said, “Guess she wasn’t a vampire, after all.”
“Thank God,” Dad muttered.
Forty-eight
“I don’t wanta leave you holding the bag,” Pete said from the backseat of his car, where he was stretched out with a towel hugged to his chest.
“Don’t worry about it,” Larry said through the driver’s window.
“We’ll come back,” Barbara told him. “It shouldn’t take more than an hour or so...”