‘Fine.’ Callahan sighed. ‘Will it hurt you if I tell you that I hope this is all in your mind? That I hope this man Straker does laugh in our faces, and with good reason?’
‘Not in the slightest.’
‘I do hope it. I have agreed to more than you know. It frightens me.’
‘I am frightened, too,’ Matt said softly.
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But walking back to St Andrew’s, he did not feel frightened at all. He felt exhilarated, renewed. For the first time in years he was sober and did not crave a drink.
He went into the rectory, picked up the telephone, and dialed Eva Miller’s boardinghouse. ‘Hello? Mrs Miller? May I speak with Mr Mears?… He’s not. Yes, I see… No, no message. I’ll call tomorrow. Yes, good-by.’ He hung up and went to the window.
Was Mears out there someplace, drinking beer on a country road, or could it be that everything the old schoolteacher had told him was true?
If so… if so…
He could not stay in the house. He went out on the back porch, breathing in the brisk, steely air of October, and looked into the moving darkness. Perhaps it wasn’t all Freud after all. Perhaps a large part of it had to do with the invention of the electric light, which had killed the shadows in men’s minds much more effectively than a stake through a vampire’s heart-and less messily, too.
The evil still went on, but now it went on in the hard, soulless glare of parking-lot fluorescents, of neon tubing, of hundred-watt bulbs by the billions. Generals planned strategic air strikes beneath the no-nonsense glow of alternating current, and it was all out of control, like a kid’s soapbox racer going downhill with no brakes:
Something flapped overhead and Callahan looked up, startled out of his confused revery. A bird? A bat? Gone. Didn’t matter.
He listened for the town and heard nothing but the whine of telephone wires.
Who wrote that? Dickey?
No sound; no light but the fluorescent in front of the church where Fred Astaire had never danced and the faint waxing and waning of the yellow warning light at the crossroads of Brock Street and Jointner Avenue. No baby cried.
The exultation had faded away like a bad echo of pride. Terror struck him around the heart like a blow. Not terror for his life or his honor or that his housekeeper might find out about his drinking. It was a terror he had never dreamed of, not even in the tortured days of his adolescence.
The terror he felt was for his immortal soul.
Part Three: THE DESERTED VILLAGE
Chapter Fourteen
THE LOT (IV)
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