Psycho - Three Complete Novels (45 page)

BOOK: Psycho - Three Complete Novels
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“I don’t understand.”

“Neither did we, until this afternoon. Coroner identified the body from dental records. You tell Claiborne he was wrong. It wasn’t the hitchhiker and it wasn’t the nun. It was Norman Bates.”

Roy felt the phone slipping through his fingers. Everything was slipping away now.
If Norman is dead, then Vizzini must have killed Driscoll.

And he was with Jan—
now.

— 35 —

J
an closed the script as Vizzini opened the door.

“Ready,” he said.

She rose. “Is Paul here?”

“He’s on the way. We can get started without him.” The director moved up from the single step and into the camper. “I’ll play Norman.”

Jan held the script out, but Vizzini shook his head. “Not necessary. He has no lines in the shower scene. Neither do you.”

“We’re doing the shower scene first?”

“Of course. It is the key to everything, don’t you agree? We will block out the action together.”

“What about cues?”

“I will tell you what I want. It is all very clear.” He smiled. “But first you must strip.”

“Now wait a minute—”

“Please. It is important to visualize your movements the way they will appear on camera.” Vizzini was still smiling as he closed the door behind him.

Jan shook her head. “Forget it. I’m not taking my clothes off.”

“No false modesty.” The smile was frozen. “I have seen naked women before. And this is not the first time you have undressed at a man’s request.”

“What’s that got to do with it?”

“Everything.” The frozen smile was mirthless, and as Vizzini moved into the light, she saw the tiny pinpoint pupils of his eyes. Little cat-eyes, like the kitten’s.

He started toward her and she could smell the reek of his perfume, mingled with another odor, sickly sweet.
He’s on something. I should have known.

“You
are a woman,” he said. “I am a man. It is only natural—”

For a moment she wanted to laugh. A voice inside echoed a mocking question—
Who writes your dialogue?

But he was reaching out, pressing her against the vanity, arms encircling her as slit-eyes stared, mouth opening to slash away the smile, breath-stench flooding forth. Jan turned her head to avoid his lips, then realized that wasn’t his intention. The hands against her back were clawing at the folds of the blouse.

She felt the cloth shred, felt his fingers fumbling the clasp of her bra, tugging it open so that the bra fell.

Jan screamed and jabbed at his eyes with her nails; averting his head, he caught her wrist, twisting it as he pulled her toward him.

Suddenly he released his grip and her arm dropped, numb. She tried to move back then, but his right hand slapped her face and his left rose to grasp the front of her blouse and tear it away, feeling her bared breasts. Dazed, Jan watched his fingers splaying toward her nipples.

As he cupped and squeezed her breasts, his head dipped down and forward and she reached behind herself, her fingers sliding across the vanity top until they encountered the crystal stem of the bud vase. She gripped it tightly, raised it high, and smashed the vase against the side of Vizzini’s head.

Roses fell in a red shower, and a red bloom blossomed below his temple. He cried out, lurching back.

Jan ran past him to the door, and tugged at the knob. The door swung open and she hurtled out—then down. She’d forgotten the single step, but it was too late to think of that now; all thought was submerged in the torrent of pain racing from her right foot up to her thigh.

Was her ankle broken or merely sprained? It didn’t matter, she had to get up. Sobbing, Jan started to raise herself from the floor, then fell forward as Vizzini’s knee smashed against the small of her back.

This time the pain was so excruciating that she almost fainted. Forcing her eyes open, she fought against the encroaching darkness, but she couldn’t fight the encroachment of his hands. Strong hands, yanking her skirt away, ripping her panties down and off. And then, as she gasped and panted. Vizzini’s fingers tightened in her hair, jerking her head back. She felt herself turning, sprawled face upward on the cold dampness of the concrete floor.

Jan stared up, fighting for breath as he bent over her. Blood streamed down his left cheek, but he was smiling again; his teeth were yellow and there were yellow highlights in the flecks of saliva at the corners of his twisted mouth.

“Get up!” he said.

“I can’t—my ankle—”

Still smiling, he slapped her again, then reached down and grasped her shoulders, pulling her erect. The pain pouring from her ankle made her moan, and the sound seemed to excite him as much as her nakedness.

“Putana!”
His hand dug into the gooseflesh of her upper arm. “Walk—”

Jan tired to break free, but he captured her wrists, then shoved her forward. Wincing, she stumbled out of the dark and into the lighted area beyond. The light of the set—the bath and the shower. He was pulling her toward the curtained stall. Little drops of red fell from his bleeding face to mark their progress across the tile flooring.

“Inside,” he said. “I want you inside.”

“No,” she whimpered. And realized she was doing just that—whimpering, like an animal. And now she knew what he wanted, what he’d intended all along. He was going to jump her there in the shower stall, take her like an animal, helpless and beaten—

Not helpless—

She sucked air into her lungs, strength into her arms, then twisted free. As her hands loosened, she raised them swiftly, clubbing her fists together and smashing at his bloody temple.

Vizzini made a sound deep in his throat, then staggered back, clawing at the shower curtain behind him to keep from falling. Panting, he recovered his balance; for a moment he stood motionless as their eyes met.

Then, without warning, his hands darted forth.

Jan turned, but it was too late. Before she could move further, his nails bit into her shoulders.

And fell away.

She looked back, then halted. Vizzini still stood with his back to the shower, his face contorted in a grimace.

“Mama mia—”

His voice trailed off into a gurgle and he toppled forward to the floor, revealing the redness spurting and spreading from between his shoulder blades.

Then, as the shower curtain ripped back, Jan saw the occupant of the stall lunging forward, knife in hand.

The blade swooped out at her throat.

She had only time to scream before the shot echoed and the knife stabbed down to strike the floor, still clutched in the hand of Adam Claiborne.

— 36 —

D
r. Steiner wasn’t afraid.

There was nothing to fear, because Claiborne was harmless now. They’d dug the bullet out and the wrist was healing nicely, but he would never hold a knife in his right hand again.

For that matter, he might never leave this room. It had been a hassle—even without a trial, there were all those extradition hearings and court orders—but in the end, permission came through and Steiner brought him home.

Home.
Steiner sighed, glancing around the room. Home was a cubicle with a few sticks of plastic furniture, a bed bolted to the floor, a lightbulb behind a mesh screen. Home was a barred window.

But at least the surroundings were familiar, if Claiborne was aware of them. At times he seemed capable of awareness, and even though he never spoke, he appeared to recognize Steiner and welcome his presence.

Claiborne was smiling now, looking up from the bed as Steiner entered, but then he was always smiling. The smile was a barrier he’d erected to shut out the world and shut the secrets in.

Dr. Steiner nodded at him. “Hello, Adam,” he said.

No answer—only the smile and the silence.

Steiner pulled a chair over beside the bed and seated himself, knowing even before he started that nothing would bring the barrier down. Still he had to try, he owed him that much.

“I think it’s time we talked about what happened,” he said.

Claiborne’s expression didn’t change, but his eyes seemed clear; perhaps he’d understand.

Then Steiner spoke, choosing his words carefully, remembering that the relationship had altered—no longer doctor-to-doctor, but doctor-to-patient. Even so, he did his best to tell the truth.

And the truth, as he saw it, was that after all these years together, Claiborne had come to identify himself unconsciously with Norman Bates. Both of them were motherless and alone, both confined, each in his own way, by institutional restraint.

Claiborne smiled.

“But there’s more to it than identification,” Steiner said. “After a time you began to feel that your fate, your future, was bound up in your patient—restoring his reason, writing a book about the case. Sanity would set him free, and the success of the book would give you the opportunity to get out of here on your own. And when Norman escaped, it meant you had failed, failed him and yourself. He was gone, leaving you a prisoner in his place.

“It must have started then, with the conviction that the only way you could escape now was to identify with Norman, share the triumph of his freedom. Yes, I know you went after him, but I think you were secretly hoping he’d get away for good. Then, when you found the body in the van and realized who it must be, hope vanished. You blacked out.

“Norman couldn’t let his mother die, so he
became
her. You couldn’t let Norman die, so you became him. And in the same way, during amnesic episodes when the alternate personality took over.”

Claiborne stared at him with the smile of the Mona Lisa, the silence of the sphinx.

“That’s what happened when you saw the body in the van. As Norman, you went on to Fairvale and killed the Loomises.” Steiner paused. “When the coroner’s verdict finally came in, they searched your car and found the stolen money from the cash register hidden under the floorboards. Do you remember putting it there?”

Claiborne was silent, his smile fixed.

“After hiding the money in your car down the street, you snapped out of fugue and returned to the store. Am I correct?”

No reply, only the set smile.

“The clipping you found prompted your trip to Hollywood. As Claiborne, you had rational reasons for trying to stop the film through argument and persuasion. But as Norman, you were ready to kill to stop it.

“Most of the time in Hollywood you maintained control—but Norman was there too. Reacting to Jan’s resemblance to Mary Crane, seeing the sets that recreated the scene of the crime.

“I talked to the people out there—Roy Ames, Jan, and the girl who shared her apartment. Some of the things they told me helped in reconstructing what happened. The rest is guesswork. For example, that face you saw in the supermarket mirror. It could have been Vizzini, it could have been hallucination. You were losing control rapidly after that, and when you quarreled with Jan, it was Norman who came back to kill the kitten. Of course, that was only a prelude.”

Claiborne’s smile never wavered.

“Time was running out for Norman, and so was all semblance of rational behavior. He had to destroy the film project, even if it meant destroying everyone connected with it.

“You broke your dinner engagement with Tom Post because Norman took over. Norman went to Driscoll’s house and murdered him. When Ames arrived, he found you there and waiting, but after you heard about Jan and Vizzini, it was Norman who rushed to the studio—not to warn them but to climb the wall, take a knife from the prop department, and hide, ready to attack. If Ames and the police hadn’t arrived when they did—”

Steiner broke off, glancing at Claiborne, but there was no reaction, only the silence and the smile.

Sighing, he rose and moved to the door. “We’ll talk again,” he said.

Even as he spoke, he realized the futility of his promise. He’d failed Claiborne, failed to reach the violence within him, the violence guarded by silence and hidden behind a smile.

There were too many of those smiles surrounding him now—not just here in the asylum, but outside in the streets. Smiles that concealed but couldn’t cure the secret sickness. Violence was a virus, a disease becoming epidemic everywhere in the world, and maybe there was no cure. All he could do was keep trying.

“See you later,” he said.

Claiborne smiled.

— 37 —

C
laiborne wasn’t listening to Steiner.

And when Steiner left, he listened only to himself. To Adam Claiborne. Adam, the first man. Claiborne, born of clay. God created him.

God created all things, including Norman Bates; we are all God’s children.

Am I my brother’s keeper?

I was
his
keeper.

We are all brothers. God said that. God said many things that we must heed.

Vengeance is mine,
saith the Lord. Claiborne may die, but Norman lives. God will protect him, for he is God’s instrument against evil.

Norman Bates will never die
. . .

This book is for
Kirby McCauley
just in case he has
nothing to read

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