information out of the cantankerous old buzzard.

He reached the office, parked, walked inside. Naomi flagged him down the second he stepped off the elevator. 'Where've you been? One of your clients has been frantically trying to get ahold of you all morning.

All morning? It's only eight-thirty.'

'And she's been calling me every five minutes since seven-thirty, when I got in. I wouldn't be surprised if there are fifty messages lined up on your voice mail.' She handed him a stack of pink call slips.

'Here.' Miles glanced down at the top slip. Marina Lewis.

He knew the feeling that settled into his midsection, it was the same one he'd had when the coroner called to tell him his father had walked away. He hurried over to his cubicle, ignoring the blinking message light on his phone, and immediately dialed Marina in Arizona. She answered, too fast, on the first ring. 'Hello?'

'It's Miles Huerdeen. I got your messages. What is wrong?

'My father. I think something's happened to him.'

It was as if she'd been holding her breath, damming up her emotions, because while her voice started out strong, it ended in almost a sob, and he suspected that hysterics were

very near the surface. She'd obviously been stressing out over this all morning, perhaps all night, and he did not want to be the one to push her past the breaking point, so he said simply, 'Well me.'

'I can't get ahold of him.' He could hear the panic in her voice.

'He's not answering his phone, hasn't answered since I started calling last night. He never goes anywhere, and even if he did, he'd be back this morning. Something's happened. I already called the police, but they won't send anyone down. Could you go over there and make sure he's all right?'

'Of course,' Miles said. 'I'll head out right now. It should take a half hour to forty-five minutes, depending on the traffic. Don't worry. I'm sure he's fine. I'll call you from there.'

He hung up. But the feeling in his gut told him that Liam Connor wasn't fine, that he was in fact dead.

The drive out to Santa Monica seemed endless. Traffic wasn't as bad as he'd expected, but every second seemed to drag out interminably, and each stoplight or slight delay caused him to hit his steering wheel in frustration. If something was wrong, he was no doubt too late to do anything about it, but he could not shake the irrational feeling that if he arrived in time, he might be able to save the man's life.

He pulled into Liam's driveway at precisely nine o'clock, according to the all-news station on the radio, and he hurriedly got out of the car, ran up to the front door. He rang the doorbell, waited. Rang again.

Waited.

He knocked loudly. 'Liam?' he called. No answer.

This was going to be bad. Whatever it was, it was going to be bad.

He tried the door, jiggled the knob, but as he'd suspected, it was locked. He had tools to get around inconveniences

such as that, but he had not brought them with him. He stepped around the side of the house, intending to try the back door before searching for a loose or open window.

He hurried around a hydrangea bush, over a brownish weedy section of lawn, and ducked under the thorny branches of a low-growing lemon tree.

'Liam?' he called. The old man was in the backyard. On the fence.

If Miles had had any doubts about the supernatural aspects of this case, about the power of curses or witchcraft or voodoo or whatever it was, they were instantly dispelled.

For Liam Connor had not merely been affixed to the fence, he had merged with it. He was naked, placed in a pose of crucifixion, and his body had melded with the boards, his skin taking on the whorled texture of the redwood, the outlines of knotholes visible beneath the hair on his arms and legs. In an area where a fence slat was clearly missing, Liam's form had been poured into the breach, approximating the shape and grain of the board while still retaining the coloring of human skin. The joining was so seamless at several points that it was impossible to tell where Liam ended and the fence began.

Only his head had escaped this synthesis. It hung forward, onto his chest, and did not touch wood even at the neck. The expression permanently etched on his static features was one of terror and indescribable agony, and his wide-open eyes, stared unseeingly down at the ground.

Miles remained rooted in place, shocked into inaction. He flashed back to the sight of Montgomery Jones' torn body-although even that, gruesome as it was, could not compare with the insanity of this.

Confronted with the enormity of a power that could not only kill a man but transform his flesh into something entirely inhuman, Miles was suddenly filled with a feeling of hopelessness.

Part of him was tempted to walk across the lawn, reach

OUt, and touch the sections of Liam's body that had become one with the wood, but though he was almost positive that whatever had done this was gone, he was still afraid, frightened to the core of his being. He turned and ran, unable to remain alone for even a second longer in that backyard.

He'd left his cellular phone in the car. He yanked open the door and grabbed the phone from its place on the passenger seat. He knew he should call Marina first, but he wasn't sure what to say, didn't know how to break the news to her. With trembling fingers, he pressed 9-1-1 instead, calling the police. He spelled out the pertinent facts in a voice that sounded far stronger than it had any right to be, and promised the woman questioning him that he would remain on-site until the authorities arrived.

Talking to the dispatcher helped organize his thoughts, gave him the chance to go through a trial run, and immediately after terminating the call to the police, before his courage failed him, he punched in Marina Lewis' number to tell her that her father was dead.

Janet Engstrom was afraid of her uncle.

She tried to tell herself that it was a fear of death, it was because his condition was worsening, because he was obviously going to die, that she felt so scared when she was near him. After all, her parents' deaths in the accident had been traumatic, and not a day went by that she did not think of the way they'd looked when she'd gone to identify their bodies. But that was not why she was afraid of her uncle.

No, it was because he was changing, because he was becoming someone she didn't know.

The strange thing was that she felt closer to her uncle than to anyone else in her family, even her parents. He was

the only one to whom she had admitted that she'd been molested as a young teenager. She'd told him of her parents' Halloween party, how she could hear the increasingly loud sounds of the partygoers through the closed door of her bedroom, how she'd sneaked out to go the bathroom and had been sitting on the toilet when the clown staggered in. She'd tried to pull up her pajama bottoms, started to yell at him to get out, but he'd lurched across the bathroom, shoved a hand over her mouth, and hit her hand away from her crotch. Then he was pushing her onto the floor, spreading her legs, and he was on her and in her and then it was over. She thought it was Mr. Woodrow from down the street, but it was impossible to tell behind the clown makeup, and afterward she could never be sure.

Her uncle had listened and offered her a shoulder to cry on. He had told her it was not her fault, that she was not used goods but the victim of a violent crime and that one day she would meet the man of her dreams and all of this would be merely a dim and distant memory.

She had never met the man of her dreams, but she had grown up to be a healthy, normal, fairly well-adjusted woman, and if her life did not have a fairy-tale ending, it was not due to the ripple effect of the rape. In fact, what sanity and happiness she possessed was probably due in large part to her uncle's supportive influence.

So when she learned that he had cancer and that it was inoperable, she had right a way returned to Cedar City, vowing to take care of him.

She'd had been prepared to quit her job, but The Store had arranged to transfer her to their Cedar City outlet and had even helped her find an apartment. Her uncle told her she could stay with him, but until he became so sick and weak that he required round-the-clock care, she wanted to have a place of her own so she could have at least a little privacy.

She'd been cooking for him for the past four months,

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