He must be close. Standing, he sidestepped away from the aisle and scanned the labeled spines. The search led him deeper into the stacks, farther and farther from the door. As his eyes moved over the books, he listened intently, ready to bolt. He heard nothing but the buzz of the fluorescent lights.
On tiptoes, head tilted far back, he squinted at the top row of books. He couldn't quite make out the lettering. It's probably up there, he thought. If it is, I'll have to climb for it. The shelves were metal, about four feet long, deep enough to hold books on both sides, secured at each corner to upright rods. They looked very sturdy. Benny grabbed a forward edge, and tugged it. There was no wobble at all. He wouldn't try climbing, though, until he was sure he had to.
He stepped to the left, dropped to his knees, and stared at the bottom row of books. The first line of letters was right, but the numbers below. Turning his head, he read the titles:
Great!
He didn't see much use for the tarot book, and he had no idea what
As he reached for them, the books shot forward, knocking into his hands and tumbling against his knees. A bony, blue-veined hand snatched him by the wrist.
The lights went out.
Shrieking, he thrust his other hand forward, ramming books from the higher shelf into the darkness, hearing volumes fall on the other side. He tried again, this time finding the shelf's edge, shoving at it, trying to brace himself as the fierce grip drew his lower hand forward.
She wants to drag me through!
With all the strength in his left arm, he tried to hold himself back. 'Let go!' he yelled.
'No!' he cried as he was dragged between the shelves.
In a frenzy of panic, he reached out with his left hand, felt the dry stiff fingers clutching his other wrist, pried one away. There was no yell of pain. Just the sharp brittle
He lunged to his feet, turning in the direction of the door — he hoped. To the left? Yes! It had to be! He reached through the darkness, slapping at the books to keep his bearings. Then the books stopped. He threw himself against the wall, felt along it, found the door. He flung it open and plunged into the stairwell.
Clawing blindly, he smashed his forearm on the banister. He grabbed the railing. Hand over hand, he followed it upward. The entire stairwell was dark. At the first landing, he dared to glance back. Only blackness. He blinked to be sure his eyes were open. He heard nothing but his own rasping breath and thudding heart, but a chill spread over his skin like a spray of ice water. She's there, she's coming!
He charged up the next flight of stairs, trying not to scream, and saw a thin strip of light from under the door. He shouldered the door open.
The librarian flinched, swiveled in her chair, and opened her mouth. She said nothing, though, as Benny sprinted past the desk in his mad race for the exit.
He shoved open the glass door. He ran down the steps to the walkway, and he didn't stop running until he reached the car.
Benny was lying across the backseat, sweltering in the locked car, when Tanya finally arrived. She opened the driver's door, and looked down at him. 'Are you all right?' she asked.
Nodding, he sat up.
'I got worried when I didn't see you in here. Thought I'd lost you.'
'Sorry,' he muttered. He climbed out. After the oven of the car, the air outside felt fresh and cool. He mopped the sweat off his face, and put on his shirt. Tanya, leaning across the front seat, unlocked the passenger door for him. He opened it, and rolled down the window before getting in.
She handed him a small, black book. Benny stared at the cover.
'Kristi did. What went on anyway?'
'Huh?'
'At the library.'
'I had some trouble,' he muttered.
'So I heard. When I showed up, Kristi said you'd run off like a bat out of hell. What were you doing down there? She said the lights were off, and you'd thrown books all over the floor. She was a little ticked.'
'I didn't do it.'
Tanya glanced at him with disappointment, reached forward, and started the car. 'Nobody else was down there, according to Kristi.'
'Somebody was,' he said, trembling now with the memory of it. He held his right hand toward Tanya. His wrist was ringed with faint bruises, raw furrows where fingernails had raked his skin.
Tanya stared at the injuries. 'Who did that to you?'
He shrugged.
'My God, Benny! You should've told someone. Who did it? Did he try to — '
'She.'
'We'd better tell campus security.'
'They won't find her. She's a witch.'
'That's crazy, Benny, and you know it.'
'Yeah,' he muttered. 'I figured you'd say that.'
'We can't tell security that a witch — '
'I'm not gonna tell 'em anything. They'll just say I'm crazy, too.'
With a sigh, Tanya shifted to reverse and backed out the car. She started driving toward the parking lot exit. The air coming through the open windows felt good to Benny. 'I know you're not crazy,' Tanya told him. 'But you've got witches on the brain, and a very active imagination.'
'Did I imagine this?' he asked, holding up his hand.
'Of course not.'
'You think I did it to myself?'
'Did you?'
'No.'
'Okay, I believe you. Now why don't you tell me what happened down there?'
'All right.'
'And then her finger broke off,' Benny said. 'Right in my hand.'
'Broke
'Yeah.'
'Bullshit,' Julie muttered.
Scott frowned at her, and glanced at Karen. She was staring into her Bloody Mary, a look of disgust on her bruised face. 'Okay,' Scott said. 'Then what happened?'
'Well, she let go and I got away.'
'You never saw her at all?'