‘No wonder you’re worried.’
‘I’m sure it’s nothing,’ she said, beginning to tremble again. ‘He probably just likes to look at women.’
‘He’s probably harmless.’
‘Doesn’t look harmless to me. Who’s to say he isn’t some kind of freak like the Mount Bolton Butcher?’
‘Hey, come on…’
Bradley’s face went pale. His eyes widened. They roamed down Kim, and returned to her face. ‘Christ,’ he muttered. ‘I hate to tell you this, but…’ He hesitated.
The change in him frightened Kim. '
‘You… you’re a dead match for his victim profile.’
‘What are you talking about?’
‘The Mount Bolton Butcher. He’s had eight victims, and they all… they were all eighteen to twenty-five years old, maybe not as pretty as you, but almost. And slim, and they all had long blonde hair parted in the middle just like yours. You look so much like the others that you could all be sisters.’
‘Oh shit,’ Kim muttered.
‘I was going with a girl who kind of fit the profile. Not as much as you do, but it had me worried. I was afraid, you know, she might end up raped and dismembered like… Is there a back way out of here?’
‘Hey, come on. You're really…’
‘I’m not kidding.’
‘I know, but… It probably isn’t him, right? I mean, he hasn’t…’
‘He hasn’t nailed anyone in two months, and the cops think he might’ve left the area, or died, or been jailed for something else. But they don’t
Kim shook her head. It felt a little numb inside.
‘I tell you, it’s one big mean wilderness. A guy could hide out for years if he knew what he was doing. So maybe he laid low for a while, and maybe now the urge has gotten the best of him, and… Not much of anyone goes camping up there anymore. If he wanted a new victim, he might have to come down into town for one.’
‘This is really starting to give me the creeps.’
‘Just sit there a minute. I’ll check the back.’
Bradley walked up the aisle between the rows of silent washers and drivers. He stepped past the coin- operated vending machines where patrons could purchase drinks, snacks, detergent or bleach. He tapped out a rhythm as he walked by a long, wooden table where people earlier had separated and folded their laundry. Then he disappeared into a recessed area at the rear of the room. He was out of sight for just a second.
When he stepped into the open again, he met Kim’s eyes and shook his head.
Not once did he glance toward the man in the car as he came back to her. ‘Nothing but a utility room,’ he said. ‘The only way out is the front.’
Kim nodded and tried to smile. She felt a corner of her mouth twitch.
‘You think your stuff is about ready?’
‘Close enough.’ She hopped off the washer. Bradley picked up his laundry bag and stayed at her side as she headed for the pair of driers near the front.
‘Your car’s in the lot?’ he asked.
‘Yeah.’
‘I’ll get in with you. If he thinks we’re really together, maybe he won’t try anything.’
‘Okay,’ Kim said. Both driers were still running. She could see them vibrating, hear their motors and the thumps of the tennis shoes she’d tossed into the nearer of the two.
She swung her laundry basket off the top of that machine, set it at her feet, crouched and opened the front panel. The motor went silent. Reaching inside, she lifted out a handful of warm clothes. They still felt a little damp, but she didn’t care.
‘If he follows us when we leave,’ Bradley said, ‘maybe we can lose him. But at least you won’t be alone. As long as I’m with you, he’ll think twice before he tries anything.’
She dropped more clothes into the basket, and looked up at Bradley. ‘I really appreciate this.’
‘I’m just glad that I’m here to help.’
‘Do you really think he might be the Butcher?’
‘I hope we don’t find out.’
The thought came suddenly, and seemed to turn her stomach cold inside.
No. That’s ridiculous.
Looking away from him, she continued to unload the machine.
What’s so ridiculous about it? Bradley seems to know a lot about the Butcher. And he wants me to take him in my car.
Maybe he’s
Don’t let him in the car, she told herself. Walk out with him, but…
‘Oh shit,’ Bradley muttered.
Her head snapped toward him. He was standing rigid, eyes wide as he gazed toward the front.
Kim sprang up and whirled around.
The stranger filled the doorway. Then he was inside, striding toward them.
He wore a dark stocking cap. His face was streaked with black makeup. His black T-shirt looked swollen with mounds and slabs of muscle. The sling of a rifle crossed his chest. So did the straps of a harness that held a sheathed knife, handle down, against the left side of his rib cage. Circling his waist was a web belt loaded down with canvas cases, a canteen and a holster. He wore baggy camouflage pants. Their cuffs were tucked into high- topped boots.
Bradley, fists up, stepped in front of Kim. His voice boomed out, ‘Stop right there, mister.’
A blow to the midsection dropped Bradley to his knees. A knee to the forehead hurled him backward. He hit the floor sliding and lay limp at Kim’s feet.
She whirled away and tried to run. A hand snagged the shoulder of her T-shirt. The fabric tugged at her, stretched and ripped as she was twisted sideways. Her feet tangled. She crashed against the floor.
The man grabbed her ankles, tugged her flat. His weight came down on her back. An arm darted across her throat and squeezed.
Kim woke up in total darkness. She lay curled on her side. Her head ached. At first, she thought she was home in bed. But this didn’t feel like a bed. She felt a blanket under her. The surface beneath the blanket was hard. It vibrated. Sometimes, it pounded against her.
She remembered the man.
Then, she knew where she was.
To confirm her fears, she tried to straighten her legs. Something stopped her feet. She reached out. Her fingers met hard, grooved rubber.
The spare tire.
The car stopped. Kim had no idea how long she had been trapped inside its trunk. Probably for an hour. That’s about how long it should take, she knew, to drive from town to the wilderness surrounding Mount Bolton.
Ever since regaining consciousness and realizing she was in the trunk of the man’s car, she had known where he was taking her. After a period of gasping panic, after prayers for God to save her, a numbness had settled into Kim. She knew she was going to die, and there was nothing she could do about it. She told herself that everyone dies. And this way, she would be spared such agonies as facing her parents’ deaths, the deaths of other loved ones and friends, her own old age and maybe a lingering demise in the grip of cancer or some other horrible disease. Has its advantages.