Reflected headlamps and highway signs made occasional flickering patterns of light and shadow across the headliner, the seatback. The light hurt my eyes; I narrowed them down to slits. And then lifted up onto one elbow, trying to see over the top of the seat.
He whispered out of the darkness, “Don’t try to sit up. If I see you in the mirror I’ll stop the car and shoot you through the head. Do you understand?”
“I understand.” The words came out thick and moist, as if they had been soaking in the same oily sweat that filmed my body.
“Good. Lie back and enjoy the drive.”
“Where are you taking me?”
“You’ll find out.”
“When? How far is it?”
“Quite a ways. Do you like snow?”
“Snow?”
“A white Christmas,” he said, and laughed. There was nothing wild or crazy about the laugh; it was low- pitched, wry. He seemed to be enjoying himself, but in a grim, purposeful way.
I said, “Who are you? Tell me that much.”
“Don’t you have any idea?”
“No.”
“My voice isn’t familiar?”
“No.”
“Keep listening, keep thinking about it.”
“We’ve met before then?”
“Oh yes. We’ve met before.”
“When?”
“A long time ago.”
“Where?”
“Think about it. You’ll have plenty of time. And don’t vomit anymore, will you? I really don’t like that stink.”
I shifted around on the seat, trying to find a less cramped position. Lying supine was impossible because of the shackles and the folded-back arrangement of my arms; but I managed to get turned enough onto my right hip so that I was able to tilt the back of my head against one armrest. That way, I could look out through the opposite window on the driver’s side. Not that there was anything to see, just starlit darkness and intermittent flashes of light as cars passed going in the other direction. Once a highway sign flicked past but I couldn’t read the lettering on it. I had no idea where we were or how long we’d been on the road.
The cold air had helped my head, lessened the throbbing somewhat so that I could think more clearly. Why was it so important to him to keep his identity a secret? No idea. No idea, either, where or when or under what circumstances he and I might have crossed paths… except that it must have been in connection with my work. Possibly while I was on the SFPD, but more likely at some point during my twenty-odd years as a private investigator. But twenty years is a long time, and I had made so damned many enemies…
I gave it up when the mental effort began to resharpen the pain in my temples. Bile still simmered in my stomach; I locked my throat and jaws to keep it down.
“What time is it?” I asked him, to break the silence.
“Why do you want to know?”
“It must be late. There’s not much traffic.”
“It’s not late. It’s early.”
“How early?”
“The beginning,” he said, and again he let me hear his laugh. “Tell me, are you afraid?”
“No.”
“You’re lying. You must be afraid.”
“Why must I?”
“Any man would be in this situation.”
“Just what
“You’ll find out. I don’t want to spoil the surprise.”
My mouth tasted raw and bitter from the vomit; I worked saliva through it, swallowed into a dry, scratchy throat. The fear was still inside me-he was right about that. But it was dull now, with nothing immediate to feed on; I had no trouble keeping it at bay. Not until a thought worked its way to the surface of my mind, a thought that ignited the fear like dry tinder under a match.
I tried to keep it out of my voice as I said, “How did you know where to find me tonight?”
“Kerry Wade, advertising copywriter, Twenty-four-nineteen Gold Mine Drive, Apartment Three. You sleep with her off and on, have for years. You see? I know a great deal about you and your lifestyle.”
“How do you know so much?”
“Oh, I have my sources.”
“Does Ms. Wade know you?”
“We haven’t had the pleasure. Are you worried about her?”
“No,” I lied.
“Of course you are. You’re afraid I’ll do something to Ms. Wade.”
I didn’t say anything. I did not want to provoke him.
“She’s attractive, isn’t she?” he said. “Yes, very attractive.”
This time I had to bite my lower lip to keep words from coming out.
Deliberately he allowed the silence to build. After a minute or so he said, “I
I let myself say, “We were talking about Kerry Wade.”
“Yes, we were. I told you I won’t torture you that way and I meant it.”
“Does that mean you’ll stay away from her?”
“You needn’t worry. I have no interest in her now that I have you.”
He could be lying, playing head games with me. How could I believe anything he said? And yet, I
I said, “So you’ve got me. Now what?”
“You’ll find out.”
“You keep saying that. Why keep it a secret? I know what you plan to do with me.”
“Do you? I don’t think so.”
“Not the details, no. The end result.”
“And that is?”
“My death.” The words were as bitter in my mouth as the vomit taste.
“You think I intend to murder you?”
“It’s obvious, isn’t it.”
“Not to me. You’re wrong, you see. I’m not a murderer. When you die it will be of natural causes. Or by your own hand. You may want to commit suicide after a while-but if so it will be
That last sentence frightened and repulsed me more than anything else he’d said.
For a few seconds a kind of wildness took hold of me, a mixture of hatred and fear and impotent rage. I thought