Dominance (26 page)

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Authors: Will Lavender

BOOK: Dominance
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“Careful?”

“That Aldiss is a mean one. People tell stories. All the time they do.”

Rice thanked the man and left the way he'd come, the old map tumbled and destroyed in the seat beside him, thinking about leading the professor to Black, pushing him through a threshold and calling out to no one in particular,
Got him. I finally got him.

He was so lost in the reverie that he almost missed the turnoff.

*   *   *

A darkness had fallen over the house, a kind of disrepair. Like everything else, this was symbolic. As Rice approached up the little gravel road, he saw the house as a mind, withered and soft and gone. How simple this would be.

He got out of his car. A basic screen door, its edge flaking with blue-gray paint. A lake in the back. The simplicity had shocked him even before. Aldiss seemed more complicated than that. But here he lived, in this nothing place, with the locals. With the stinking and putrid common, with those who had no business even standing in a room with a man with the sort of intellect Aldiss possessed.

Why?
Rice asked himself.
Why here?

Smirking, he knocked on the screen door.

The thing bounced on its hinge. Noise shot out into the house, rattled around inside the place. Darkness thrummed.

“Professor!” Rice called. “Professor Aldiss, it's Dean Anthony Rice
from Jasper College. I've come to ask you a few questions about what is happening on our campus.”

Nothing. He stepped back, looked around the side of the house. The trees ruffled in the wind. The grass, dead and torn and uprooted here and there, its black underbelly exposed, tickled. Beneath him were the skeletons of flowers in an old trellis.

“Professor Aldiss!” Rice called again, louder this time. “I really need to talk to you. It's urgent. Michael Tanner has been dead for three days now and now Lewis Prine has been—”

Something moved inside. A tiny shift of light, silver against his cheek.

“Professor Aldiss?”

He waited. Five seconds, ten. Fear pricked up in the back of his mind and he swallowed it down. Nothing to be afraid of here, Rice said to himself. Nothing but an old man who has chosen to live with the locals. Nothing but a has-been, a relic. Gathering strength, he knocked again. The screen door bumped, revealing a fraction of space next to the jamb. That was it. That fraction, that slice of interior. He could if he wanted to, Rice told himself. He could. He should.

His heart hammering now, he opened the screen door and went inside.

31

“Why?” someone asked when Detective Black had escorted Sally out of the room. It was Matthew Owen, still standing behind Dean Fisk. The nurse looked stricken. “Why would Aldiss think that one of you—”

“Because he hates us,” Christian said. “He always did.”

“Christian,” Alex said.

“It's true, Alex. You didn't see it, but the rest of us did. He hated it that we were free and he lost most of his life in that prison. He wanted to punish us for that. He wanted to create this, this—
dominion
over us, even when the class was over. And he did just that.”

“Crazy,” Frank muttered. The others agreed.

“Maybe he's right.”

Everyone turned to stare at Lucy Wiggins, the outsider in their group.

“I mean, the detective said that someone in this house must have shot that guy downstairs. Maybe this professor of yours knows something that we don't.” Her eyes seemed to sparkle with the mystery, as if this were a TV movie and she the unlikely heroine.

“Or maybe this is his way of manipulating us,” Keller said.

“Go on, Mr. Keller.” Dean Fisk's voice crept up from the shadows of the room.

“It would be just like Aldiss to turn this into one of his games. He might have been trying to turn us all against one another, to cause exactly what's happened, just so he could sit back and watch from afar. That's the kind of person he is.”

Alex felt a pain in her chest as Keller spoke.
No,
she thought.
Please, not you.
She wanted to say to him:
Iowa was not a mistake, what we did there was not part of one of Aldiss's games.
But she could say nothing. She was frozen in fear, the locked room and the people inside churning chaotically around her like the dust that raged down from the high, dark shelves.

“But the question still remains,” Lucy went on, gaining confidence in the part of the drama she was playing. Her eyes wide, she pulled herself up to full height and intoned, “Who killed your two friends?”

They all looked at one another. For the longest time no one spoke, and when a voice did come, it belonged to Dean Fisk himself.

“I believe,” he said, “that I know the answer to that question.”

32

Rice walked among the city of books. There were so many of them here that they had become part of the house, fused themselves into the walls. It was as if, he thought, the little house were made of paper and glue. There was no delineation of where the walls began and the books ended, no crease of space between—

He turned. His senses pricked up. He stared into the dark.

“Hello?” he asked. “Who's there?”

But no. It was his imagination. There was no one here. The house was small enough to see every room from this vantage, and yet there was something deceptive about it. It was like a maze—one could get lost inside here. Rice ran his eyes over the great room and the three rooms off the main hallway. A room like a study with an old ratty chair that looked out on the lake, a tiny nook of a bathroom, and wedged between those rooms was another. A bedroom, he presumed. And how strange, Rice thought, approaching not of his own accord now but moved by something not of his volition, getting close to the room and
smelling it
, smelling the air and knowing, knowing inside him that he had found something based on this and this alone.

It was feminine. He smelled the scent of a woman in the air.

Fuck,
he said to himself.
Fuck, fuck, holy fuck.

He backed out into the hallway, the tiny house pulsing now around
him, the air and light and everything else congealing around him and making it difficult to move. To stand. To breathe. He had to get out of here. He had to get back to Jasper.

Rice went for the nearest door, broke out into the daylight.

Gulping for air, he took a few steps. Fell down, his knees digging into the wet earth, then pushed himself up and took another step. He looked up, his vision swimming clear, and realized that he had come out the wrong way. He had gone out the back, had gotten lost inside the maze of books and found himself here, on the opposite side of the house, right in front of the lake. Now he would have to—

The lake. Rice looked at it, watched as it burbled and gulped in the wind. It was black as sludge, the banks having shed over the years and deposited themselves inside the water. He was on the north bank, looking over the water to the opposite edge. Nothing but Vermont over there, fluttering blue in the afternoon sun. And here, where he was, he smelled the rancid water. The disuse of it, the crazy way it curled and flowed like a black quilt being swept off a bed. In the middle was a swimming raft, and Rice watched the thing spin in the water. Overhead, a flock of winter wrens turned upward in the sky, the sound like the pages of a thick book being thumbed.

When he looked down again, he saw something just beneath the surface.

It wasn't far from where he stood. It was there, just beneath the skin of the water, flicking in the light like the signal of a dying television. There, not there; there, not there. The sun refused to stay still.

“No,” Rice said, the moisture in his mouth totally gone. “No. No.”

Then he was bending. Bending down, his knees in the slickness, his body sliding down into that muck, his hands reaching, his face just inches from the seal that broke his world from the water's, the
taste
of the lake there, the cloying metal sharpness of it, but he was down in the cold, his arm immersed in its glass, and he was reaching, trying to touch the thing he'd seen shimmering, half of him disappearing into the blackness and then finally, finally, he touched it. And the feel of it strangely set him right, set the world on its axis, made everything okay again. The feel—it felt exactly how he thought it would feel. It was exactly what he thought it would be.

It was a hand.

33

“Who did this?” Keller asked. “Who killed our friends, Dean Fisk?”

The dean looked ahead, his eyes pausing for a moment. “Isn't it clear by now, Mr. Keller?”

There was something in that empty gaze. Something insistent. Pleading.

“No,” Alex said.

“Isn't it clear?” the man repeated, his dead eyes wandering over them all, moving from face to face. “What's happening to each of you? Isn't it obvious what he's doing?”

34

Rice sat on the bank. The wind had stopped. The water was quiet.

He had his cell out. His hands were shaking, palms smeared with black mud. He squeezed the phone just to feel something. Just to calm himself. His stomach flashed with heat and he turned and spit onto the earth.

Rice dialed a number.

“Yeah?”

“Black,” he said. “You've got to get over here. It's Aldiss. Melissa Lee . . . she's dead. She's in the lake behind his house. I found—I found her. I found her and it's all over. Did you hear me, Black, it's all over.”

“I heard you,” the detective was saying. The man was running. Rice heard the rush of wind on his end, the snap of a car door, the sound being dragged out of the reception like a bag closing up and taking it away. Then he started the engine of his car and the phone jostled with the movement of him fighting the wheel.

“Get over here,” Rice was saying, his voice ruined and weak. “She's here, Black. The woman is in the water. The son of a bitch hid her in the water and I've found her. I felt her hand. I . . . my God, I
smelled her
in his house.”

“Ten minutes,” Black was saying. “Ten minutes and I'll be there. But you have to stay away from that house, Dean. He might still be there.”

“No,” Rice said. His voice was desperate now, breathless.

Black said nothing. He waited. He seemed even then to know.

“Richard Aldiss is gone,” Rice said. “He's running.”

Then the call was cut and Dean Rice lay back and looked up at the sky, thinking about that hand. The way it had felt. The way it had seemed to grab on to him when he touched it, tried to pull him back. To pull him closer. To pull him under.

Iowa
1994
35

The two students drove into Hamlet, Iowa, at twilight.

Keller had taken the wheel of the Mazda because he was afraid that Alex would wreck it. But she didn't mind. She wanted to see the landscape. Wanted to experience the place as Richard Aldiss had years ago, to know it as he had.

Hamlet was a two-stoplight town. The boundaries of the place were flat, the frameless geography running away into the pink sky like the top of a table. An ordinary downtown, sections of cubes abutting one another, fissured pavement and a group of old men sitting on a bench outside an abandoned building. Cars edged down Main Street on their way to the end of town, where better things must have been going on.

“Fucking Iowa,” Keller said.

“Yeah,” she agreed.

They crept on. Their plan was that they didn't have a plan. At least not yet. Keller had agreed with her that Aldiss had indeed sent them here. The clue inside
The Coil,
the strange photograph Keller had been given, and the fact that the two Dumant victims had been here not long before they were murdered—all of it suggested this was the heart of the professor's literary mystery. “Let's go,” Keller had said that morning. “Let's go find Fallows.”

Now he drove them past the cubes and they were at the fringe of town, dead brown cornfields stretching away into the distance on either side of the rental car. The sky at this hour seemed to be on fire. Alex thought,
That? That was it?
She looked out the car's window to hide her disappointment.

But what had she expected? What had she really hoped to find in this place?

Don't give up,
she reminded herself.
They were here. The Dumant killer's two victims drove down this same street.

This was where the two mysteries had to come together. In Hamlet they would discover Fallows's identity and exonerate Aldiss for the crimes he did not commit. It was what she had been preparing for since finding the book in the Fisk Library. This was the end.

“Turn around,” she said to Keller now. “I want to go back through.”

“You what?”

“I want to see the town again.”

So he spun the car around right in the middle of the barren highway, and again Alex studied the downtown. The buildings, split and cleaved, and the old men, who stared at them a little longer this time. She marveled at the emptiness of the place, the absolute deadness of it.

“Where now?” asked Keller. There was fatigue in his voice.

“Now we go find him,” Alex said. “We go to Olive Street.”

*   *   *

It didn't take them long to find the Rutherford house.

Olive Street ran parallel to Main. The drive there took them four minutes. It was a picket-fence neighborhood, clumps of melting snow pushed off the road, two cars in each driveway. A pack of boys rode past them on bicycles, staring suspiciously inside the car.

“Where the hell is it?” Keller asked, scanning the addresses on the eaves of the houses.

“Here,” Alex answered. She pointed to a woman walking down the street, her head down to stave the wind. Keller pulled over and Alex rolled down the window.

“Excuse me,” she called. The woman stopped, warily, her eyes jumping from face to face. “We were wondering if you could tell us where Charles Rutherford lived.”

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