Authors: Kelley Armstrong
“Of course they did. No one wants to believe a woman is capable of things like that.”
He pulled himself upright. “That’s it exactly! The evidence was right there, on the tapes, her laughing, egging me on.”
“You got played,” I said. “But I’m here to offer you a chance at another round. See, your wife is dead, right? But she’s not in hell.”
“What?”
“A serious injustice, I know. But you can set that right.”
“You want me to prove she did it? I can—”
“No, we’ve already established that. What we need now is more detail, to give the celestial court a better picture of the defendant, her state of mind at the time of the crimes.”
“State of mind? She was fucked-up. Crazy. Obsessed with that Scottish bitch—”
“What Scottish bitch?”
“Suzanne Simmons. She killed some kids back in the sixties.”
Now, that sounded familiar. “This Simmons. Did she have a partner?”
“Yeah, her husband or boyfriend. They killed a bunch of kids and buried them out in these grasslands or something.”
“And Cheri was interested in this case.”
“Interested? She was fucking obsessed. Wouldn’t stop talking about it. She’d always been into that kind of stuff, serial killers and shit. We both were. But then, all of a sudden, she starts going on and on about this Scottish chick, telling me all about her. It was spooky. Almost made me think maybe she was some kind of reincarnation of this Suzanne Simmons, but I looked it up, and Simmons was still alive.”
“So Cheri talked about those murders.”
“And talked and talked and talked. She kept going on about how this Simmons had found the key. That’s what she called it. The key. We had to stop pissing around—talking about it, fantasizing about it—and do it.”
“Kill someone.”
“Only we couldn’t just kill them. If we wanted this key, we had to do it a certain way.”
“The way Suzanne Simmons had.”
“See, that’s what didn’t make any sense. The stuff she said, it had nothing to do with Simmons. What we had to do was different. She had these instructions—”
“Is that what she called them?”
“Yeah. Instructions. Like she was reading out of some how-to book. At first, it was okay. The stuff she said, it was all things we’d talked about before. But then she started getting careless, and I said, if we keep doing this, we’re going to get caught, but she insisted it was all part of the plan, and we were protected.”
“Just like Suzanne Simmons, who was caught and sentenced to life in prison.”
“Hey, don’t look at me. I’m not stupid. But when I brought it up, Cheri said things went wrong with Simmons, but they were all fixed now.”
“Uh-huh.” I looked him up and down. “Fixed very well, I see.”
“Look, that little cunt—”
“This key. What was it?”
“Oh, mystical bullshit. Magic powers and eternal life. Oh, and really great sex.” He paused. “Can’t say she was wrong on that last part. The sex was pretty damned good.”
I remembered the scene from my vision, the girl crying for her mother. My hands balled into fists. Jaime shot me a warning look, but I didn’t need it. MacKenzie was being forthcoming so I had no excuse to beat the answers out of him. Not yet.
I prodded his memory some more, but he just kept going in circles, babbling about the key and Suzanne Simmons and the instructions.
“After Cheri started in on this, how long did it take before you started killing?”
“She wanted to right away, but I held her back. I tried to reason with her.”
“Uh-huh.”
His head shot up, glare meeting mine. “I
did.
I said killing went too far. I just wanted to bring the girls home and have some fun.”
My nails dug into my palms. “You mean you just wanted to rape them.”
“Right. I’m no killer. So finally she says, okay, we’ll take a girl and I can have some fun. But then, when we’re done, she says we can’t just let her go.” MacKenzie paused. “I had to admit, she did have a point there.”
Jaime laid a hand on my arm. Fat lot of good it would have done, since I couldn’t even feel her touch, but I got the point and swallowed a snarl.
Before I could ask a new question, MacKenzie faded, becoming translucent. Jaime whispered an incantation and he popped back into 3-D.
“They’re pulling him back, Eve,” Jaime murmured.
“One last question.” I walked to MacKenzie, towering over him. “Do you like it where you are, Robin? Is it a happy place?”
“W—what? Are you kidding? Do you know where I am? They—”
“Stake you out on a rock in the desert and let buzzards pick the flesh from your bones? ’Cause that’s what I’d do. In fact, I think I’ll suggest they start doing that, because you’re every bit as much a murdering piece of shit as your wife.”
MacKenzie inched back. “No, you’ve got it wrong. I didn’t—”
“Oh, and speaking of your wife, while I’m sure she’ll get her comeuppance someday, I told a little fib earlier. She’s not suffering. She’s not even dead. But, you know what, she
is
enjoying that million-dollar life-insurance policy she took out on you before the trial.”
“What?” He jumped up. “No way. No fucking way. I never signed—”
“One word for you, Robin: ‘forgery.’” I bent down to the vervain bowl. “Oh, and one other word, too.” I blew a puff of smoke on him and smiled. “‘Sucker.’”
Robin MacKenzie fell back into the ghost world, his screams still resounding through the cemetery long after he was gone.
“Slammed the door a little hard there, didn’t you?” Jaime said. “Let’s hope you don’t want to talk to him again.”
“I won’t.”
I watched Jaime leave, making sure she got back to her rental car okay. Sure, if someone
had
jumped her, there’s not a damned thing I could have done about it. But I still felt better watching.
When she was gone, applause erupted behind me. I spun to see Kristof, leaning back against a tombstone.
“Now,
that
was a performance,” he said. “Lying about his wife still being alive was good. But the life insurance bit? Truly inspired.”
“A bit clichéd, don’t you think?”
“It worked, didn’t it? Added a few extra logs to his hellfire.” He backed onto the double gravestone and motioned for me to sit beside him. “So your Nix was giving Cheri both a role model and a road map.”
“A road map unrelated to the role model, which seems strange.” I leaned back and watched the moon duck behind a cloud. “Maybe that’s the point. Repetition without duplication.”
Kristof nodded. “Another young couple killing kids, but with enough differences to keep things interesting for the Nix.”
“Interesting, yes. But maybe more than that. Not just changing the routine but improving on it. Cheri said things went wrong with Suzanne Simmons, but the problems had been fixed.”
“Refining her method. So she goes from Simmons to Cheri MacKenzie to Amanda Sullivan, presumably with a few in between.”
“Sullivan is a pinch-hitter,” I said. “The Nix only stayed with her long enough to help her kill her children, then made sure she got caught. For chaos, comparing Cheri MacKenzie to Amanda Sullivan is like comparing a steak dinner to a Quarter Pounder.”
“Fast-food murder.”
I straightened. “That’s it! When you’re starving, you grab what’s available, no matter how bad it tastes. The Nix doesn’t just want chaos, she
needs
it. Otherwise, why—”
A bluish fog floated past. Before I could brace myself, the Searchers sucked me under again.
18
I STOOD IN FRONT OF A PLAIN NARROW RECTANGLE OF
a two-story house, white-sided with dark shutters.
“Doesn’t look like the throne room,” I muttered.
“Definitely not.”
I started, and saw Kristof beside me.
“What am
I
doing here?” He shrugged. “My guess is as good as yours. Either the Searchers accidentally sucked me in along with you or the Fates want me to start pitching in.”
We looked around. The sun had barely crested the horizon, but Mother Nature had turned the dial onto full this morning, and it blazed down, promising tropical conditions by noon. I glanced at the house. Every window was closed despite the heat. Air-conditioning? A horse and buggy trotted past behind me. Okay, probably not air-conditioning.
“Colonial America,” Kris said. “Does that sound like any ghost-world regions you know?”
“Boston…but this doesn’t look like Boston. And the ghost world is never this warm.”
A door opened across the road and a man dressed in trousers and a long-sleeved white shirt hurried out, carrying a hat and a black bag. He had salt-and-pepper hair, a high forehead, and thin whiskers that joined his mustache to his sideburns.
He hurried to the street and, without so much as a glance either way, crossed…and walked right through me.
“Okay,” I said. “If he’s a ghost, too, how did he do that?”
The man pushed open the gate of the house I stood in front of, and strode through. He climbed the few steps to the front door and rapped. A man opened the door. He was tall and thin, with white hair and a beard. Despite the heat, he was dressed in a black suit, with his jacket buttoned. He grunted a surly hello at the younger man.
“Just stopped by to see if you folks are feeling any better,” the neighbor said.
“Feeling better?”
“Yes, your wife came over this morning, said you’d both been up all night with stomach complaints. She thought someone might have put something in your food—”
“In our food? That’s preposterous. Abby would never say—”
“Oh, you know how womenfolk are. They get to worrying sometimes. She seemed fine to me—”
“She
is
fine,” the man said. “We’re all fine, and if you go charging us for this visit—”
“Now, Andrew, you know I’d never—”
“You’d better not,” Andrew said, and slammed the door.
The doctor shook his head, hefted his bag, turned, and walked through me again. There was a movement in one of the main-floor front windows, a young woman washing the glass. Her face was bright red from exertion and the heat. From her simple outfit and the size of the house, I assumed she was a maid.
“Crack open a window,” I said. “You got rights, girl. No one should be working in this heat.”
The young woman’s eyes went round. She dropped the rag and bolted.
“Shit!” I said. “Am I not supposed to do that?”
An exterior door slammed. Kristof gestured toward it and we both took off, following the sound around the house, past the side stoop. There we found the maid puking into the back garden.
“Oh, geez, they really are sick,” I said. “They’re making her work when she feels like this? Isn’t there a labor board in this town?”
“Not in
real
Colonial America,” Kristof murmured.
“Which is where I suspect we are.”
“In the past?”
Before he could answer, the maid retched and hurled. I patted the poor kid’s back, but I knew she couldn’t feel it.
“You sick again, Bridget?” a voice asked.
Another young woman, also simply dressed, leaned over the side fence. She shook her head. “That’s what you get, having to dump those slop buckets every morning. Bound to make anyone sick. Cheap old bugger. He can afford a water closet. Just too bloody cheap.”
Bridget moaned and wiped her sleeve over her mouth. “It’s not the slop buckets. It was supper last night. I told him that mutton stew wasn’t no good no more. Not after three days sitting out in this heat. But he said—”
“Bridget?” A plain dumpling of a middle-aged woman appeared on the side stoop. “Bridget! What are you doing out there, chitchatting the day away? I want these windows cleaned.”
“Yes, ma’am.”
Bridget accepted a sympathetic nod from her colleague, and trudged back inside. Kristof and I followed, through the kitchen and into a room with a sofa, several chairs, and a fireplace. The man of the house—Andrew—adjusted his jacket and headed toward what I assumed was the front foyer. With a curt nod to his wife, and another to a round-faced, dark-haired woman on the sofa, he strode out the door, evidently unaffected by the bad stew.
I followed Bridget into a more formal version of the room we’d just left. The parlor. Until I’d moved into my Savannah house, I’d thought parlors were places that sold ice cream. Wiser spirit that I was, I now recognized a real parlor when I saw one.
Bridget picked up her discarded rag and resumed cleaning the front windows.
“What the heck am I supposed to be doing here?” I asked Kristof. “These people can’t hear me, can’t talk to me. What am I supposed to see, and why?”
I walked back into the other sitting area, where the two women were. The younger woman—the daughter?—continued to do needlepoint on the sofa, while the older woman, Abby, shook out a tablecloth from the side table.
The younger woman was definitely old enough to be married, especially in this time period, but I couldn’t see a ring on her finger. As she worked, she kept her head bowed, and her shoulders pulled in—the natural posture of a woman who’s accustomed to hiding from the world. Her light-blue dress had been washed too often, and she looked bleached out against the dark sofa. Yet, despite this outward timidity, she poked the needle through the fabric with quick, confident jabs.
Abby had moved on to dusting the mantel clock. Both women worked without an exchanged word or glance, as if each was in the room alone. After a few minutes, Abby walked into the front foyer. Her shoes clacked up a flight of steps. The younger woman lifted her head, tilting it to follow the sound of Abby’s shoes across the upstairs floor. As she tracked Abby’s path, her eyes flicked past mine and I blinked. In that gaze I saw something as coolly confident as her strokes with the needle. She waited until Abby’s footsteps stopped, then resumed her work.
“Okay, this is going nowhere,” I said. “Maybe I was supposed to follow Andrew.”
The young woman’s eyes flicked up, gaze meeting mine for a split second. Then it dropped back to her needlework.
“Hey,” I said. “Did you see—”
Bridget tore through the sitting room so fast I felt the breeze. She raced for the kitchen. The side door banged shut. A moment later, the retching began. The woman on the sofa shook her head and poked her needle through the fabric again; then, after the first stroke, she stopped. Her gaze lifted to the ceiling, where we could hear Abby bustling about. Then she tilted her head toward the back of the house. The sounds of Bridget’s vomiting continued.