Authors: John R. Maxim
Tags: #Horror, #General, #Psychological, #Suspense, #Memory, #Thrillers, #Fiction, #Time Travel
For a long moment Lesko held back, wanting time to
study the stricken old man. The fear he'd seen had deep
ened into shock. Lesko saw recognition in his eyes. No
doubt of it. Whatever Jonathan Corbin was to him, what
ever compulsion forced this old man from behind the safety
of his walls, whatever need he felt to see that face up close and in person, he did know Jonathan Corbin. He saw a face
that, at least to Lesko, was a nice face. Friendly. Not like
his own. Maybe no Robert Redford, but a good face,
crooked nose and all. Yet to one man it was a face like that
of the worst devil you'd see in a bad acid trip. Is that what
you see, old man? A devil face? Or am I on the wrong
track? Maybe an avenging angel. And if you do see an avenging angel in Jonathan Corbin, could it possibly have
to do with all those dead Corbins who kept popping up in Chicago forty years ago? Of course it could. But whatever
the connection is, we won't find it by standing around
Barnes & Noble's all afternoon, will we?
As Lesko had hoped, and although not wholly by choice, Corbin and Gwen Leamas were still on foot. Even by mid-
afternoon there were few cabs to be seen on
Fifth Avenue.
Plows had cleared the major midtown arteries, but many of the crosstown streets remained blocked to vehicular traffic.
Corbin didn't mind walking. The sun had broken through
and the city never looked so clean as it did under a bright sky that follows a snowfall, its grime and sorrows hidden, its hard edges softened.
“
Quite,” he agreed.
She was watching him, he realized, for any sign of re
newed discomfort or disorientation as they crunched northward toward Rockefeller Center. But there was nothing. If
anything, he felt refreshed. Whether it was Gwen's com
pany, the bright sky, the high atmospheric pressure that
cleared it, or the memory of similar walks in Chicago, Cor
bin felt the way a man should while taking a healthy walk
with a woman who loved him. The umbrella flicked forward.
Gwen tugged at his arm and steered him into a left turn
at Fifty-second Street. Corbin shook the old man from his mind and, resisting an urge to look behind him, returned to
enjoying the look of the city.
“
Well?” she asked. “What do you feel?”
They'd stood for several minutes on the raised plaza of
the Burlington Building between two frozen fountains that
were shaped like dandelions.
“
Not a thing.” He shrugged. “Everything's really
pretty.” Some of the buildings, especially the older ones
up toward the park, had begun to look like birthday cakes
dripping with frosting. The tops of street lamps were like the necks of swans.
“
What about the elevated railway?”
“
Beg pardon?”
“
The Sixth Avenue Elevated.” She had a picture book
open in her hands. “It did exist and it was right here. You
said you saw it taking shape yesterday when we were run
ning for the subway. And the terminus you passed under while you were chasing your... that woman began just up
there at Fifty-eighth Street.”
Corbin's lips moved involuntarily. Forming a word. A
name. Damn! More names, each blurring the other, and a
sudden whirlwind of memories and emotions whipped
through his mind.
“
Say it out loud, Jonathan. Did you feel something?”
”
I think I almost had her name. I'm not sure.”
“
What did it sound like? Your impressions, Jonathan.
Trust your impressions.”
”
A short name. A vowel sound. Like Anna. Emma.
Something like that.”
”
Ava?Ula?”
“
It's gone, sweetheart.”
“
You clenched your fists just then. Does she make you
angry even thinking about her?”
Corbin squinted, trying to recall and sort out all the tiny
glimpses that had buzzed past him. There was the woman,
certainly. And thoughts of the man in the bar came back
and they were entwined together like lovers. That notion
seemed right to Corbin. That they were lovers. He must have been an avenging husband when he beat the man as
he did, but that realization didn't seem to evoke any par
ticular rage. There was something else, much greater in
scope, behind his fury that evening and, if he trusted his impressions as Gwen suggested, he'd find himself believing that it had something to do with the Sixth Avenue Elevated
Railroad. Not just the part that ran past here but the whole
thing, and that was a trail he couldn't begin to know how to follow. Corbin shook his head.
“
Let it alone then,” Gwen suggested. “Perhaps it will f
loat back when you're not trying.” She closed the book
of photographs and slid it into the shopping bag at her feet. Then she fished out her book of maps and scribbled a few
more items. “Now,” she said finally, “this is where it
could get exciting. You said that in these snowstorm visions
you were following the woman in the direction of Fifth
Avenue. You also said that you passed under the darkened
terminus. At that point, therefore, you were clearly headed
in an easterly direction across—Did you see any open sky
above you? Or just tracks and terminal?”
“
No tracks. The whole structure ended there.”
“
Then you were eastbound on Fifty-eighth Street
crossing Sixth Avenue. But you also recalled crossing an earlier thoroughfare. The one on which you found her hat.
And then when you crossed that street you stumbled on the
body of a man named George.”
“
Seventh Avenue.”
“
What else do we know?” She held up the map for him
to see. “Working further backward, you said you had
turned left onto the sidewalk where you found a hat—a
toque, you called it—with a Lord and Taylor label. An
impressive bit of detail, by the way. You were sure she'd
gone in that direction because you seemed to know that she
was trying to reach a particular address. In any case, you
knew that she could not have gone in the opposite direction because even you were having difficulty walking into this
tremendous gale that was funneling up Seventh Avenue from the south. With the wind behind you, you followed
her one block north before turning east. This means that
when your dream began, you had to have been standing on the northwest corner of Fifty-seventh Street and Seventh
Avenue.”
Corbin glanced at the intersection on the grid where
Gwen Leamas was pointing and then looked away. He saw the corner in his mind. And he felt the wind from that night chilling him, draining away all the warmth that had been
building within him since he woke up that morning with
Gwen at his side.
“‘
What good is this?’' he asked quietly.
“
Come on, Jonathan.” She took his arm. “Let's go find
out.”
As Corbin walked with Gwen Leamas up the slight incline of Fifty-seventh Street toward Seventh Avenue a se
ries of odd notions began to pick at him. The first was a
certain self-consciousness, as if he were in a place where
he conspicuously did not belong. The feeling made no
sense to him. He might have understood it if he'd been
walking through Harlem, but there was hardly the same
ethnic exclusivity to the sidewalk of West Fifty-seventh
Street. And although no passerby looked at him with either
curiosity or suspicion, the sensation of being an outsider
persisted. Even that was not quite right. There were people who
thought
he did not belong there. That was it. But who those people might be, he had no idea. It seemed as if they were behind him. East of Sixth Avenue. The ones with the
money.