champagne — although hers was, of course, spiked.
Here in the wake of her death, conflicting emotions bedeviled Ahriman. He regretted the loss of Susan, all but swooned to the tug of a sweet sentimentality, but also felt wronged, betrayed. In spite of all the great good times they’d had together, she would still have ruined him if she’d had the chance.
At last he resolved his inner conflict, because he realized that she was just a girl like other girls, that she hadn’t deserved all the time and attention he had lavished on her. To brood about her now would be to concede that she’d had a power over him no one else had ever exercised.
“I’m glad you’re dead,” he said aloud in the dark living room. “I’m glad you’re dead, you stupid girl. I hope the razor hurt.”
After vocalizing his anger, he felt ever so much better. Oh, really, a thousand percent.
Although Cedric and Nella Hawthorne, the couple who managed the estate, were currently in residence, Ahriman was not concerned about being overheard. The Hawthornes were surely abed in their three-room apartment in the servants’ wing. And regardless of what they might see or hear, he need not be concerned that they would ever remember anything that would endanger him.
“I hope it hurt,” he repeated.
Then he took the elevator up to the next floor and followed the hallway to the master-bedroom suite.
He brushed his teeth, flossed meticulously, and dressed in black silk pajamas.
Nella had turned down the bed. White Pratesi sheets with black piping. Plenty of plump pillows.
As usual, on his nightstand was a Lalique bowl full of candy bars, two each of his six favorite brands. He wished he hadn’t brushed his teeth.
Before turning in, he used the bedside Crestron touch-screen to access the automated-house program. With this control panel, he could operate lights throughout the residence, air-conditioning and heating room by room, the security system, landscape-surveillance cameras, pool and spa heaters, and numerous other systems and devices.
He entered his personal code to access a
When he keyed in a seven-digit number, a pneumatically driven section of granite on the face of the fireplace slid aside, revealing a small, embedded steel safe. Ahriman entered the combination on the keypad, and across the room, the lock released with an audible
He went to the fireplace, opened the twelve-inch-square steel door, and removed the contents from the safe box, which was lined with quilted padding. A one-quart jar.
He put the jar on a brushed-steel and zebrawood desk and sat down to study its contents.
After a few minutes, he could no longer resist the siren call of the candy bowl. He pondered the contents of the Lalique container and finally selected a Hershey’s bar with almonds.
He would not brush his teeth again. Falling asleep with the taste of chocolate in his mouth was a sinful pleasure. Sometimes he was a bad boy.
Sitting at the desk again, Ahriman savored the candy, making it last, while he thoughtfully studied the jar. Although he didn’t hurry through the snack, he had gained not a scintilla of new insight from his father’s eyes by the time he finished the final crumbs of chocolate.
Hazel, they were, but with a milky film over the irises. The whites were no longer white, but pale yellow faintly marbled with pastel green. They were suspended in formaldehyde, in the vacuum-sealed jar, sometimes peering through the curved glass with a wistful expression and sometimes with what seemed to be unbearable sorrow.
Ahriman had been studying these eyes all his life, both when they had been seated in his father’s skull and after they had been cut out. They held secrets that he wished to know, but they were, as ever, all but impossible to read.
42
Due to the lingering effects of three caplets of the sleep aid, Martie appeared to be unable to work herself into a state of panic, even after she was freed from the neckties, out of bed, and on her feet.
Her hands trembled almost nonstop, however, and she became alarmed when Dusty got too close to her. She still believed that she might suddenly claw out his eyes, chew off his nose, bite off his lips, and have a thoroughly unconventional breakfast.
Undressing to shower, she had an agreeably heavy-eyed, pouty look, which Dusty found appealing as he watched her from a distance that she deemed just barely safe. “Very erotic, smoldering. With that look, you could make a guy run barefoot across a tack-covered football field.”
“I don’t feel erotic,” she said, her voice husky. She pouted without calculation but with powerful effect. “I feel like birdshit.”
“Curious.”
“Not me.”
“What?”
Skinning out of her underwear, she said, “I don’t want to go the way of the cat.”
“No,” he said, “I meant your choice of words. So you feel like birdshit — why in particular
She yawned. “Is that what I said?”
“Yeah.”
“I don’t know. Maybe because I feel like I’ve dropped a long way and splattered all over everything.”
She didn’t want to be alone to shower.
Dusty watched from the bathroom doorway while Martie spread the bath mat, opened the door of the shower stall, and adjusted the water. When she stepped into the stall, he moved into the room and sat on the closed lid of the toilet.
As Martie began to soap herself, Dusty said, “We’ve been married three years, but I feel like I’m at a peep show.”
A bar of soap, a squeeze bottle of shampoo, and a tube of cream conditioner were objects so lacking in lethal potential that she was able to finish bathing without being seized by terror.
Dusty got the hair dryer out of a vanity drawer, plugged it in for her, and then retreated to the doorway once more.
Martie balked at using the hair dryer. “I’ll just towel it a little and let it dry naturally.”
“Then it’ll just frizz up, and you’ll hate the way it looks, and you’ll bitch all day.”
“I don’t bitch.”
“Well, you certainly don’t whine.”
“Damn right I don’t.”
“Complain?” he suggested.
“All right. I’ll admit to that.”
“You’ll complain all day. Why don’t you want to use the hair dryer? It’s not dangerous.”
“I don’t know. It sort of looks like a gun.”
“It’s not a gun.”
“I didn’t claim any of this was
“I promise if you turn it up to maximum power and try to blow-dry me to death, I won’t stand still for it.”
“Bastard.”
“You knew that when you married me.”
“I’m sorry.”
“For what?”