Garden of Darkness (29 page)

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Authors: Anne Frasier

Tags: #Thrillers, #Suspense, #Fiction

BOOK: Garden of Darkness
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Rachel stepped back, slammed the door, turned, and ran—this time for the house.

With a hand cradling her stomach, her breathing ragged, she raced back the way she’d come, reaching the refuge of the kitchen, slamming the door, locking it.

She pulled out her cell phone even though she knew it was pointless. No signal. She stuck it back in her pocket.

The door shuddered as the weight of Evan’s body slammed against it.

He pounded and shouted.

Snow shot through cracks in the walls, and wind shrieked around windows. Glass shattered and something thundered against the table.

A massive stone.

Evan followed, tumbling through the window, crashing to the floor. Without stopping, he rolled and jumped to his feet.

Rachel spotted a cordless phone on the kitchen counter. She grabbed it and began dialing 911.

Evan swept up the base, tugged it from the jack, and smashed it against the wall.

The handset went dead.

Always run out, never in.

No choice.

She dropped the phone, grabbed the nearest door, and wrenched it open. Dark stairs.

No. Go another direction.
She looked over her shoulder.

Too late.

She hurried down the uneven, ancient stairs.

Darkness swallowed her.

Her palms moved over stone and dust and dirt.

Her feet made contact with the ground. She lurched forward, hands outstretched.

Some sort of tunnel.

She smacked her head, then ducked.

Turning, winding, until she came to a solid wall. Frantic, she felt for a door, an opening.

And found one.

It was small and broken, but she managed to squeeze through.

A room. Damp and cold. Blindly, she found a notch in the wall and tucked herself inside and waited.

He would find her.

Like an animal, he would sniff her out and find her.

She heard him.

Moving closer, his feet shuffling over the dirt floor. She saw a faint light bobbing and moving in her direction.

There was no escape.

She turned, her eyes seeking something, anything. If not a way out then a weapon.

In the darkness she caught the dull glint of metal. She moved for it, her hand wrapping around a wooden handle.

A shovel.

She lifted it high and faced the entrance. Evan burst through the opening. She started to bring down the weapon, then hesitated.

She couldn’t do it. She couldn’t hit him.

He grabbed the shovel and tossed it aside. He held a lantern that gave off a muted light. Dust particles curled and drifted.

Sh, sh, sh.

“I see you found them.”

She didn’t understand.

He lifted the lantern higher, the weak light penetrating the deep crevices.

And then she saw the mummified remains.

“Victoria and her daughter.”

The girl in the photo. The poor little blond girl.

“When they were down here dying, you and I were upstairs making love. How does that make you feel?”

He’d read the journal; he was living in Richard Manchester’s house, drinking a tea he thought contained the heart of the Pale Immortal.

Oh, Evan.

“This is what I wanted to show you. This is what I’ve waited a hundred years for you to see. By killing me, you caused their deaths.” He stood in front of her, pressing her to the wall, too close for her to knee him.

“Ah, sweetheart. I loved you. But you knew that, didn’t you?”

Parallel lives. It was easy to see how someone who’d lost touch with reality might be confused.

“I’m Rachel.”

He smiled crookedly. “Ah, but you are also Florence. Florence is in your veins, and in your voice, and in your slightest gesture. Can’t you feel her? Reaching through time and seasons and heavy winters? You are Florence. Your blood will be the sweetest blood I’ve ever tasted.”

She caught his face between her hands and held on tightly, forcing him to look at her. “Evan!” She gave him a wake-up shake. “Evan! Look! It’s me. Rachel.”

His eyes closed and she shouted at him again. “Damn you, Evan Stroud!” She slapped him hard. Once. Twice.

His eyes opened and flared in anger, but she saw recognition in their depths. He stared, his breathing harsh and ragged.

“I’m sorry I didn’t help you sooner, but I’m here now, and you’re stuck with me. Do you hear? I’m not going anywhere, and I’m not letting you walk away from me again.”

Her words reached him.

He let out a sob and collapsed, dropping to his knees. He wrapped his arms around her legs and pressed a cheek against her thigh.

“Rachel.” Her name was muffled, his mouth against the fabric of her jeans, the words spoken with a kind of baffled wonderment. “Don’t leave.” He clung to her. “Even if you aren’t really here, don’t leave.”

She was thinking everything was going to be okay when she felt her water break.

 

Chapter Forty-seven

 

 

Graham handed the cash to the parking attendant. The wooden arm lifted; he stepped on the gas and the car shot out of the hospital ramp.

Kristin leaned forward in the passenger seat and looked up at the sky. “Whoa.”

Graham gripped the steering wheel tighter. “This is freaking awesome.” He’d never driven in snow.

His cell phone rang. Alastair.

“Where are you?” his grandfather asked.

“Ready to head to Old Tuonela.”

It would take only ten minutes to get there. He didn’t want Evan to be alone. And Kristin . . . Well, that had just happened. She would be leaving for Minneapolis once the storm passed, but in the meantime she needed a place to stay.

Pretty simple.

“Better come to my house,” his grandfather said. “The weather is nasty. Visibility is bad, and some north-south roads are already drifting.”

It was weird, but the snow created a feeling of safety, a sense of being in a cocoon. Beyond the car hood, streetlights were blurry and everything looked like an old photo. For a kid who’d lived most of his life in the Southwest, this was pretty cool. Graham couldn’t believe he was actually excited about the weather. “We’ll be okay.”

The signal dropped and he lost contact.

Probably for the best, Graham thought, pocketing the cell. Because Alastair might try to play the grandfather card and tell him to come home.

He stopped at a red light.

No other cars on the street. There was no sign of life other than shop window lights and traffic signals that changed even when nobody was there.

Kristin pulled out her seat belt strap, locked it, and leaned back in the seat.

“What do you think?” Graham asked. “It’s five miles to Old Tuonela. The snow isn’t that deep. It can’t get much worse before we get there.”

“I’m from Minnesota, where this would be considered a dusting. I say go for it.”

The light turned green and he hung a right, then accelerated and made a run for the hill. The car lost traction and slowed to a crawl as they crested the peak. It picked up speed again and they both exhaled in relief.

They left downtown and the river behind, heading north. Once they broke away from the protection of the buildings the wind increased. An occasional drift slowed their speed and tried to suck them off the road.

“Should I slow down?” Graham asked, both hands on the wheel as he crouched forward. “I’m not used to driving in snow.”

“You have to go fast or you’ll get stuck. You have to have enough speed to plow through the drifts. But don’t slam on the brakes. Don’t even touch the brake pedal if you can help it.”

The car felt boggy. It wouldn’t go straight, and he had to keep turning the wheel to compensate. “Look.” Back and forth with the wheel. “I’m like a little kid pretending to drive.”

They both laughed.

Maybe too loud. Maybe with too much enthusiasm.

Graham was nervous. Because of the rescue their relationship had taken a step somewhere, but he wasn’t sure where.

“If you hadn’t found me, I’d still be out there.” Kristin looked through the passenger window. “I’d be dead.”

That’s what he’d been thinking. “It was really my dad who found you.”

“But he wouldn’t have looked if you hadn’t gone to him for help.”

She was right.

He felt proud of Evan. Proud of them both. And he’d been there. He’d held her while his dad drove. He’d gotten her into the hospital.

“Look out!”

The car veered to the left; then the ass spun around, and the next thing he knew they were flying backward. Everything moved incredibly slowly and incredibly fast, as if he were computing it all with two completely different parts of his brain.

Would the car ever stop?

At the same time he appreciated the fluidity of the movement, the gliding, flying, smoothness of it contrasting with what he knew would finally come.

The impact.

With a lurch, the car stopped. He and Kristin slammed forward and were immediately jerked back by their seat belts.

He sat there a moment, heart racing.

The air bags hadn’t gone off, so the impact couldn’t have been that bad. “You okay?”

Kristin stared straight ahead, both hands on the dashboard. “Yeah, I think so.”

They took a little more time to collect themselves.

“I’ll bet we’re stuck,” she finally said.

Graham felt like such a dumb shit. “Maybe not.” The road was right behind them. He put the car in reverse. Tires spun, but the car didn’t budge.

“We’re stuck.” Not a shred of doubt in her voice.

“It was your idea to continue on,” he griped.

“You should have mentioned that you didn’t know how to drive in snow.”

Graham opened the door, stepped out, and sank to his knees. He buttoned his coat and squinted his eyes against the falling snow. He jammed his hands in his pockets, wishing he’d brought a hat and gloves.

They were near the turnoff. He was pretty sure of it.

He got back in the car. “We’re close. We should be able to walk there in a few minutes.”

“Always stay with the car. That’s the rule.”

“Since when do you obey rules, Miss Shoplifter?”

“Since I about died out there, asshole.”

“We haven’t met a single car. They probably won’t start plowing until the snow stops.”

“How much gas do you have?” She leaned over to look. “Quarter of a tank.”

“That won’t last long. We could be here all night. I say we walk.” He reached over, opened the glove box, and found a flashlight. Pushed the switch. It worked.

“I’m not leaving the car.”

That was insane. “I’m not staying here. We’re close to the house. We need to get out of here before the snow gets deeper. If we stay, we’ll end up having to hike out when the car runs out of gas, the snow is deep, and we’re cold.”

She shook her head.

She’s still weak,
he realized. She shouldn’t be trudging through deep snow—at least until he had his directions figured out. “I’ll go. You stay here, and I’ll come back for you if I find the house. If I don’t find it, I’ll come back. Either way.”

He left her there.

The headlights cut into the storm. He followed the twin beams until they vanished.

 

Chapter Forty-eight

 

 

Richard Manchester wiped the blood from his chin with the back of his hand, stepped over the dead body, and headed up the stairs to the ground level of the museum.

A sound caused him to turn.

There was the museum worker, the one who cleaned, standing in the stairwell staring at him, eyes wide, mouth hanging open. Richard contemplated killing him, but what was the point? He’d have to cross the expanse of polished floor to do it.

He turned and walked out the front door, down the wide steps, and into the snow-filled darkness.

Sh, sh, sh.

They were everywhere. His followers and his enemies. The ones who’d eventually turned on him.

Let them talk. Let them complain. They’d been foolish when they were alive; they were even more foolish dead.

The wind was powerful. It whipped his hair and stung his cheeks.
Wonderful.

He lifted his face to the sky, closed his eyes, and inhaled deeply.

He could smell the river. He could smell Old Tuonela. He could even smell the polish used to shine the banister of his home. And
her.
He could smell her. Along with his unborn baby.

He flipped up his collar and put his hands in his pockets. With each step he grew stronger and felt the cold less. Down a brick street, up a cobblestone alley. Past the morgue, and out beyond the border of the new town, where the hills grew tall and sharp and the roads turned back on themselves.

Alastair’s phone rang.

“Another call from the museum,” the dispatcher said.

“Let me guess. The Pale Immortal is roaming around again.”

“You got it.”

Alastair sighed. “Tell whoever’s on patrol to check it out. No need to report to me. I’ll follow up in the morning.”

“Will do.”

Alastair hung up.

Had Graham made it home?

He pushed the autodial for Evan’s number.

No answer.

Lights came at him, slowed, and stopped. A window was rolled down and a man leaned out. “Need a ride?”

Manchester shook his head.

“Sure?” Now the man was looking at him with strange curiosity, trying to see in the dark.

“Go on about your business,” Manchester told him, getting into his head. His voice was smooth and hypnotic. “Go home.”

Dazed, the man nodded, rolled up the window, and drove away.

People obeyed him. People did what he said.
Most
people.

He walked, and even though the snow was deep it didn’t matter. He enjoyed the sensation. And even though he could see only a few feet in front of him, he didn’t care. He knew where he was going.

He was close when he spotted something in the distance.

A car.

 

Chapter Forty-nine

 

 

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