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Authors: Joe R. Lansdale

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BOOK: Act of Love
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"So be it."

Milo turned and started down the dark trail.

Barlowe yelled to him, "Give my regards to your lad, Jello."

Milo trembled, thought, no, he's baiting me. I'm through with him all the way. He kept walking toward the glow of the street lights.

 

THURSDAY ... 8
p.m.

 

Before heading for home he cruised for a victim down Astrodome way. Passing that landmark monstrosity, it made him think of a huge breast. Now one that size would be
fun.
It would take forever to carve it into slabs of red, wet meat. An eternity of fun.

A blue '68 Mustang convertible went by him on the right hand side. Long brown hair whipped up into the night wind. The street lights, bright as day, danced off her naked back. She was wearing a bathing suit top, dark green in color. He wondered what she was wearing below. Bathing suit bottoms? Shorts? Jeans? He would soon know.

She took an off ramp.

He moved quickly to the right lane, and at a bit too accelerated a speed, he took the off ramp behind her.

 

Part Three:

The End of It All

Vengeance is without foresight

 
—Napoleon I

 

Justice is truth in action.

 
—Joubert

 

Self-defense is a virtue, sole bulwark of all right.

 
—Byron

 

No man ever did a designed injury to another without doing a greater to himself.

 
—Henry Home

 

I think there are certain crimes which the law cannot touch, and which therefore, to some extent, justify private revenge."

 
—Sherlock Holmes

 

 

THURSDAY ... 8
p.m.

Patricia Quentin had no idea she was being followed.

The day had been one of perfection for her. The lake had been like a giant blue liniment for her bruised and battered soul. She no longer hated Roger, not at all, and by the same token, she knew she no longer loved him. It was as if this day was the punctuation mark that ended her pain.

Just like my Old Man told me, she thought. "Roger's no good. Not worth a dried cow turd." True enough.

I have a new life before me now. As the saying goes: "Today is the first day of the rest of your life."

Wrapped in the joys of emotional freedom, Patricia didn't notice that the same car had been following her for miles, holding back approximately three car lengths. When she reached the residential street where she lived, she was aware of lights hard on the tail of her Mustang, but she wasn't frightened. Not yet.

Driving a bit faster than she cared to, she whipped into her driveway to avoid the car up her tailpipe, and killed the engine. She sat for a moment with her arm thrown back over the seat watching the car that had been behind her.

She was curious, nothing more.

The car went past. She didn't recognize it.

It didn't frighten her when it slowed down at the end of the block and hesitated longer than it needed at the
Stop
sign, then with a sudden spurge, turned right and speeded off. For a moment she thought it might be Roger, drunk again, back to try and satisfy his lust and slash her feelings with his cutting remarks. But if so, he had backed out at the last moment and gone his way.

She got out of the Mustang and closed the door. She wore only a bathing suit. A sharp stone went into the ball of her bare foot, and this demanded her attention. Using one hand to support herself against the hood of the Mustang, she used the other to pluck the rock from her foot.

Headlights bobbed at the far corner of the block, slit the street wide open with light.

Could he have circled? Patricia wondered.

The car was moving slowly, half-way up the block now.

To hell with him, she thought. If it's Roger I'll give him the quick brush off. From now on he's like so much air to me.

Patricia squeezed out a drop of blood from the wound, made a sound like "yetch." Patricia had a weak stomach and hated the sight of blood, especially her own.

Own fault, she thought, locking up your sandals with your towel and tanning lotion. What good are sandals in the trunk?

Her thoughts were interrupted by the sound of a car door closing.

Thinking it was Roger after all, she placed her injured foot on the ground and turned angrily. By God, she'd had it. This was the showdown . . .

The man from the car wasn't Roger. He was coming across the lawn toward her. The car at the curb was most certainly the one that had been tailgating her. Still she didn't recognize it. She kept thinking it would come to her.

The man was halfway across the lawn now. The shadows clung to him like leeches.

An odd and unaccountable tentacle of fear reached into her brain. "Can I help you?" she asked, immediately wishing the words hadn't come out of her mouth. That was what she said at work when people came into the shoe department. Worse yet, her voice had trembled.

"Yes," the man's voice was pleasant enough, dry and husky but certainly not sinister. He was smiling. Against the night the teeth were as white as alabaster. "I'm afraid I'm lost," the man continued. "Not my neighborhood at all. I have a friend name of Gaston lives over this way. You know them? Has a wife, Jean, a little girl named Alice."

"No. I don't believe they live around here."

The man was almost to her.

"Oh, I'm certain it's around here somewhere. I mean I may not know this area, least not immediately, but this is the right end of Houston."

"No one by that name around here," Patricia said. She could see now that the package beneath his arm was not a package at all. It was a bundled up raincoat. It seemed like an odd thing for a man to carry on a perfectly clear, warm night.

The man was an arm's length away now.

"Stop right there," came out of Patricia's mouth before she could prevent it.

The man stopped, put a puzzled look on his face. "Sure."

Suddenly he moved . . . and was on her. His left hand grasped her throat, his right clamped down over her mouth.

Patricia tried to scream but couldn't.

The raincoat had fallen from beneath the man's arm and struck the driveway with a clank. Out of the corner of her eye the struggling Patricia could see something had partially fallen from the folds of the raincoat. Something that glimmered. Something metal. Something sharp.

Patricia kicked the man in the shins. Hard.

He made a pained sound, jerked the hand from her throat and brought it back into her face as a fist.

She kicked once more, weakly this time.

The fist came back again; then it was gone, then back again. Red, white and black flashed alternately before her eyes before flashing together in a pinwheel of color . . . then she fell into unconsciousness. Her last thought before the plunge was that something warm and wet had fallen on her face.

*

Her eyes, while alert, had been big—big blue china plates of fear. He had enjoyed that immensely. Now the moon and the smog- ridden stars and the street lights shone in her suddenly less wide eyes with a dull, flat glare. He looked about him quickly. Saw no one. He dragged her to the house, propped her against the door. He went back to reclaim the raincoat and bayonet. He picked up her ring of keys from where she had dropped them, went back and unlocked the door. Patricia fell back against the floor with a thud.

Taking a firm grip on her thick hair, he pulled her inside and closed the door.

He put the raincoat aside, bent over her and grasped the bottom of her bathing suit, tugged it off in one quick move. Ripping the bathing suit top apart with a frenzied jerk, he stood for a moment basking in her nakedness. Blood was running in slow rivulets from her mouth and nose, branching out at her neck and chin, rolling toward the floor.

He kicked off his shoes, hastily began removing his trousers, so hastily in fact that he ripped his zipper free of the lining. With his pants in a heap on the floor, he pulled on the raincoat, not bothering to remove his shirt. He was much too anxious for a delay.

Any moment someone might show up, a roommate or parent, even. He was certain, because the house had been dark and her car was the only one in the drive, that she was alone. At least for now.

He pulled her legs apart and arranged his penis between the folds of the raincoat. Dropping to his knees between her legs, he watched, mesmerized, as the blood on her face began to widen on her cheeks. Pure beauty.

For a brief moment he felt foolish. Perhaps someone was in the house. Maybe his caution was out the window, a servant to his lust. Certainly this had been a random strike. No careful planning here . . . But the thought melted. He stretched out on top of her and mounted her with a grunt.

He reached the bayonet to him, placed it against her throat, rested both palms on top of the flat side, watched as her eyes tried to draw consciousness to them.

Patricia was aware of pain between her legs and all over her face. Suddenly her vision cleared and she looked up into the eyes of Satan, aware only that something cold was against her throat. She wanted to scream, but only a gurgle came out.

*

He began the moment he thought she was aware, pressing gently at first.

Beads of blood, like cheap ruby-red costume jewelry, formed at her throat; then her entire neck was a slash of crimson. Her mouth was opening wordlessly. Her eyes were like big china blue plates again.

Timing it simultaneously with the thrust of his hips, he pushed the blade down with all his might.

Her neck exploded in a fountain of red. Blasted his face, the carpet, the walls. The torso, the head hanging to it by only a shred of flesh and bone, began to twist and lurch convulsively.

As the spasms jerked their last he climaxed with a groan. Then, as he lay atop the body bathed in ecstasy, he began to lap the blood from the stump of her neck with a frenzied tongue.

FRIDAY ... 6
p.m.

 

When he got home from work, the first thing he did was take the head and hand out of the freezer compartment of his refrigerator. He somewhat regretted not keeping the other hand, but he had other plans for it, and wasteful as it seemed at the moment, he was sure it would have the desired effect he wanted. He dismissed that. He would think no more of the other hand. He had the left one and the head.

He took the head and hand, wrapped and frozen inside separate plastic bags, and placed them in the sink. He was about to run warm water over them for thawing when he suddenly hesitated. He took the bag containing the woman's head from the sink, and brushing away the frost with his palm, looked long and hard at it.

The eyes were like cracked blue marbles seen through a thin film of milky water. Lovely now in a different way. And the blood . . . he was glad he hadn't washed it off. It had frozen into lovely patterns. It swept out of her nostrils in rust colored rivers of ice. Her mouth was sealed with it; a red-brown plug of silence.

It was almost a pity to thaw it.

He returned the head to the sink, turned the hot water on it. While the water ran, he got down his cookbook. So far the recipes for pork had worked fine for human flesh; therefore, he saw no reason to deviate.

SATURDAY . . . 7:45
p.m.

Rachel was worried about Marvin. At first she thought it was overwork, but as time went on he became worse. More sullen. More withdrawn. It was almost as if there were two of him. One, the man she loved; the other, a remote and nervous soul. And that other was slowly devouring the one she loved.

He had taken to erratic habits. Before, he'd been content to read in his library, or watch an occasional television show, or take her out to eat or to the movies. Now he avoided these things. He came home, preferred to be alone, and then at odd moments would become restless and leave.

"Going down to the drugstore for a magazine," he would say. But he never came back with magazines.

"Going to get a chocolate bar, or something," he would say. But if anything, he was losing weight, not gaining. He hardly touched his food at home.

As for sex. He hardly seemed aware of her. The bed was for sleeping, nothing more—when he came to bed. Often she would awake and not find him there. He had still not come upstairs. And when he did come to bed she was seldom, if ever, aware of it. She knew he was getting less than three hours of sleep a night. He just sat below in the den and worried, and it was all since this Hacker stuff.

Even now he was gone, had been for an hour and a half.

"I'm going to drive around a bit," he said. "Don't fix supper for me. I'll be back late. Might drop by and see Warren." And then with a look of pain in his eyes, "I've just got to do something. Can't sit. It eats at me if I do." Suddenly he was gone.

At first she thought it might be another woman, but no, she knew him too well for that. Or at least she thought she did . . .

"Mamma?"

Rachel stood at the sink with her arms in dishwashing suds up to the elbow. "Oh . . . I'm sorry, baby. Have you been standing there long?" '

"No longer than a couple of weeks. I've been calling you."

Rachel took her hands from the water, shook off the suds, dried them on a hand towel. "What is it, JoAnna?"

"How do I look?"

Rachel surveyed the tight green bell bottoms, the ruffled, white blouse with the low- cut front. "Maybe," Rachel said, "you look a little too good. Know what I mean?"

"Sexy?" Jo Anna said with a grin.

"I guess so. I don't think I like you looking sexy."

"You don't exactly dress like Little Black Sambo yourself."

Rachel laughed. "When's Tommy coming by?"

"Eight."

"Where you going tonight?"

"Movie."

"Do I have to ask which one?"

"No. You don't have to check on me like a little girl, though."

"You are a little girl, little girl."

"The Redland."

"A drive-in?"

"Last time I looked."

"Daddy doesn't like you going to drive-ins."

"Afraid I'll get sick from the draft."

"Don't get smart," Rachel said, but she could hardly help smiling. "As long as you stay well dressed you won't get sick . . . about nine months later. Know what I mean?"

"Oh, mamma. You know me better than that."

Rachel leaned against the cabinet. "Baby. I don't know anybody better than that. At least at an in-door theater you have to consider modesty."

"Mother!"

"Daughter!"

Jo Anna frowned. "All right. I'll tell Tommy to forget the drive-in."

Rachel made a motion like a bow being drawn across a violin, made a sad whining noise to go with it.

"Ha, ha," JoAnna said.

The doorbell rang.

"Ill get it, Mamma."

"Probably for you anyway."

Rachel turned back to her dishes. Listened as JoAnna opened the door. Tommy's voice floated back to her. "Man, you're looking good."

"I know it," JoAnna said half giggly.

"You ready?" Tommy asked.

"Yeah. But . . . there's been a change in plans."

"Oh."

Almost whisper soft. "Mamma says no drive-in on account of you know what."

"Oh."

Rachel found herself straining to hear.

Suddenly both JoAnna and Tommy were in the kitchen. "We're going now."

Rachel turned to look at Tommy. He was a tall, handsome boy, almost as dark as Hanson, but not quite. He had a natural hairdo, but not a full-blown one. It was actually rather short. She agreed with JoAnna's choice. He was handsome, and for that matter, nice.

"You look nice yourself, dishsuds and all,"

Tommy said. "I mean, I was telling JoAnna she looked nice, but if you're any indication of what she's going to look like when she gets older, I think I'll stick around."

And intelligent, Rachel concluded in a half amused way.

"You two be careful and have fun," Rachel said.

"We will," Tommy said. Rachel thought that a bit too certain a statement, and she thought, but didn't say, "What kind of fun?" Nope, she concluded, I'm being an old hen. JoAnna has to make her own mistakes. I can't make them for her or keep her from them. But, on the other hand, I can try.

"Bye, Mom," JoAnna said, kissing Rachel on the cheek.

"Rye, baby. Be careful."

"I'll take care of her," Tommy said. "See you later, Mrs. Hanson. Say hello to Mr. Hanson."

"I will."

JoAnna took Tommy's hand and they started out. They do make a good pair, thought Rachel, as she turned back to her dishes.

*

Hanson was getting too close. Too damn persistent. But maybe a little direct close-to- home action would make him pull back on the leash. With that in mind, he had planned tonight's events carefully. A little research had turned up the nigger's address and the fact that he had a wife and daughter. Nothing like losing someone you loved to throw a scare into you and hurt you the deepest. Tonight Hanson would hurt to the core.

The van he was using for the job had been candy to steal. He had had to leave his car in a parking lot again and do a bit more walking than he intended, but when he found the van, bright blue with great long yellow flame licks painted on the sides, he felt certain he had a winner. And when he found a key on his special ring that fit the ignition, and when that motor had roared, causing the whole machine to shake eagerly beneath him, he knew his instinct and judgment had been perfect. The van was souped up from the word go.

He now sat at the corner of Hanson's street, watching, observing. He had been there for fifteen minutes, just long enough to see a sleek black Grand Prix drive up in Hanson's drive, and observe a black youth get out and go inside. Almost absently, he fondled the raincoat that lay on the floor between the van's bucket seats, felt the hard metal of the bayonet through the vinyl. Feeling it was as comfortable as feeling his penis, rubbing it erect. In fact, caressing the bayonet was bringing him to erection. He would satisfy that need shortly, but for now, he must wait.

He was eager to deliver the box, although in some ways, he thought using the contents this way was wasteful. He had intended to mail it, but no, this method was far more interesting . . . dramatic even.

The front door of the Hanson residence opened again. This time the teenager came out with an attractive young girl. He watched her through narrowed eyes, observed the sensual movement of her hips. Soft brown love on a cushion of blood.

She was the one, he decided.

He watched as the youth backed the Grand Prix out of the drive. They did not come in his direction. The Grand Prix moved slowly to the block's end and took a right.

Counting to ten slowly, he started up the van and drove away from the curb.

The box would have to wait.

*

He followed them out Southmore, watched as they turned into a theater parking lot. Pulling in after them, he parked some distance from their chosen space and watched. They got out of the Grand Prix and walked up to the theater, arm in arm, laughing together.

There were two long lines for the twin cinema. One of the movies was
Prophecy;
the other
Love at First Bite.
They fell into the line for the latter.

His watch showed 8:27. Movie must begin at 8:30, thereabouts. Counting previews of coming attractions, snack bar advertisements and the movie, they would be in there for at least two hours. If he knew youngsters like he thought, they would have plans after the movie, and not just for a Coke. When he was growing up they sometimes called it "going to the woods," "grubbing," or "parking." Whatever, it was popular then and would be now. He wished he hadn't missed out on that fun, but perhaps tonight he could make up for vacant youthful memories.

He checked his watch one more time, started up the van and headed back to the Hanson residence.

*

After the dishes, Rachel decided to treat herself to a small glass of wine. She had just poured it and settled down at the dining room table when the doorbell rang.

Never fails, she thought, never fails.

She went to the door, checked through the peep-hole. No one. That struck her as odd. Too odd. Kids playing pranks, perhaps. Perhaps. She went to the window, eased back the curtain and peeped out. There was no one standing at the door, but there was something before it. A box. Peripherally she saw lights, turned to look.

A blue van was pulling quickly away from the curb.

Odd, she thought.

She waited five more minutes, then went to the door and picked up the box. HANSON was marked on top of it in big, magic marker letters. Sort of late for a delivery. But considering there were no stamps, hardly a professional presentation anyway.

She turned the box around and upside down. Something heavy clunked inside.

Curious.

She closed the door and set the box on the dining room table, finished her wine. It was addressed HANSON, and although that was her name too, and she could open the box herself, she was certain it was addressed to Marve since that was what he most often went by. Usually with a great big "Mr." in front of it.

She'd wait until he got home.

Unless he took too long, and then her curiosity was bound to get the better of her.

*

Still nearly an hour and a half to waste. He knew just how to do it.

*

Rachel was just about to open the package when she heard a car in the drive. She went to the window and looked out. It was Hanson. Her intentions had been to confront him as soon as he arrived, try to get to the bottom of his recent insanity. Late night drives, disorientation. She wanted to talk to him again about giving up the big city, moving out to his grandpa's farm. But the minute she saw him, saw the odd look on his face—a poor mask for internal frustration—she decided to let it ride.

She met him at the door like a happy puppy.

"Well," he said when she opened the door, "you certainly look happy."

"And why not. We—or maybe you—have a secret admirer."

Hanson came inside. "A secret admirer?"

"Someone who lusts for you at a distance. Someone with a warm spot in their heart—or elsewhere—for your big, masculine body."

Hanson smiled. "Okay. What's up?"

She took him by the hand. "Follow and all shall be revealed."

She led him to the dining room, pointed to the box on the table. "Someone rang the doorbell, took off and left the box there. It has
Hanson
written on the top, so I assume it's for you. And if you don't open it immediately I'm going to break your arm off at the elbow. I've been dying to look at it."

"Who's it from?"

"A secret admirer, I told you. Just
Hanson
on the box, nothing else. No return address. In fact, it wasn't delivered by post."

"Huuummm."

"Come on, you big dummy. Open it."

"All right, all right."

Hanson picked up the box and started for the den.

"Hey," Rachel called, "where you going?"

"Come on. I'm going to open it in the den where I can sit in my chair."

"Now that's rich. Yassa Massa, I'll sit at you feets while you. opens it, and maybe kind massa you'll let me have a peek."

"Maybe," Hanson said. He went into the den, Rachel hot on his big heels.

Hanson sat down in "his" chair, set the box in his lap, cranked a cigar out of his shirt pocket, and carefully plucking a match from the gopher pack he carried, struck it and lit his cigar, puffing slowly.

"Quit stalling, you big ape."

"Ehh, ehh, ehh. My secret admirer."

"Well the admired is going to have a big hole in his head from my fist if he doesn't open the package."

"Hold on to your horses."

Hanson edged himself sideways in the chair and dug out his pocket knife, settled back comfortably and opened the smaller, sharper blade. He cut at the paper tape that held the lid in place. When it was sliced free, he folded the blade in and returned the knife to his pocket. He set the box on the floor in front of his chair.

"Come on, come on," Rachel said, as excited as a kid at Christmas.

He peeled back the cardboard flaps. Inside was a folded sheet of paper and a plastic bag.

The smell hit him first.

"Get back, Rachel."

"What? I want to—"

"Trust me, baby. Get back."

Rachel stood up, moved across the room to the sofa and sat down.

There was a hand inside the bag.

A woman's hand, peeling off flesh, stinking of death.

The cigar fell from his mouth, struck the box, rolled inside and hit the plastic bag, already full of holes from rough treatment. The cigar burned through the plastic with a hiss. The stink of it filled Hanson's nostrils, and then there was another smell, the smell of burning flesh. He jerked the cigar from the box and stood up quickly.

"Marve, what is it?"

"Baby," his voice was brittle. "Leave the room, please."

"Marve—"

"Trust me. If you've ever trusted me, trust me now."

Rachel stood up from the sofa. "Okay, baby." She exited quickly.

Holding back the bile that was rising in his throat, Hanson opened the box again. He reached in and fished out the folded paper, put it in his lap. He allowed himself three deep breaths of air to clear the smell from his head. He pushed the box away from him with his foot, crushed his cigar out in the ashtray next to the chair.

BOOK: Act of Love
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