instead so Dr. Cogan could fix you up.”
“I know, I know-you
“But there’s one thing I didn’t tell you the truth about,” Lyssy continued. “That part about how Lilith said Max and Kinch killed all four people at the Corders’? That’s what we want the cops to think. That way you could go free, while one victim more or less isn’t going to make much difference to me as far as my sentence goes.
“But Dr. Cogan says the cops can probably tell from our fingerprints and stuff who killed which victim. So I figured that before you decided whether to come along with me or stay behind, you needed to know that it was Lilith who killed the woman in the bathroom-that’s what she told me, anyway. She said she-”
“No, don’t!” cried Lily, covering her ears with her hands. “I don’t want to hear about the details.” It wasn’t guilt-she felt precious little of that. Some shock, maybe, and a mounting sense of panic as the full import of Lyssy’s revelation began to sink in. Still, she couldn’t help feeling it was like one of those mystery movies where the main character has an identical twin who does all this stuff the other twin gets blamed for.
Only an alter is closer than a twin, Dr. Irene was always saying-it’s a part of
The thought was kind of scary (for Lily, not being in consciousness was a little like what she imagined being dead would be like: the world goes on, but you’re not there) but also tempting. She pictured herself waking up somewhere in the future, the way she’d awakened this morning, or in the airplane the other day, and looking around in confusion at palm trees and a white-sand beach, straw huts and turquoise reefs; on the patio table next to her there’d be a colorful drink with a tiny umbrella in it.
Then Lyssy’s voice yanked Lily back from her daydream. “Me, I’m already looking at life without parole, minimum,” he was saying. “If I’m lucky. Lethal injection if I’m not. So basically, I’ve got nothing to lose. I don’t know what they’d give
“Do you think we really have a chance of getting away?” Lily asked him.
“More of a chance than we have if we don’t do anything, if we just sit around here waiting for a knock on the door.”
“What I still don’t get is why you want me to come with you. You’d probably stand a better chance alone. And it’s not like
“But I fell in love with
She thought she’d misunderstood him. “You what?”
“Fell in love with
“But-but
“I don’t think love
Footsteps on the front porch, then a clanking sound.
“It’s all right,” said Dr. Cogan, who had taken off her earphones when she saw they were listening for something. “It’s just the mailman.”
The footsteps receded. “We’re almost done here,” Lyssy told the doctor. “Would you mind…?” He waited until she’d donned the headphones again, then turned back to Lily. “The sooner we get going, the better our chances.”
“But we can’t just drive away and leave Dr. Irene-she’ll call the police the second we’re gone.”
“Does that mean you’ve decided to come with me?” Lyssy tried to keep his voice casual, though his heart was in his throat.
“You said it yourself-what do I have to lose? But what about Dr. Irene?”
“Oh, I can handle that,” said Lyssy happily.
9
Driving south in the red GMC pickup, Pender didn’t even try to pretend he hadn’t crossed the line. Aiding and abetting, obstruction of justice, possession of a stolen vehicle-he’d broken enough state and federal laws to put him away for at least a couple years.
Of course, he could still put it all to rights with one call to the Shasta County sheriff. But in this new, topsy- turvy world Pender found himself in, he knew that if he did the right thing, dropped a dime on Mama Rose, he’d be ashamed of himself for the rest of his life. He knew his life had been in her hands back there. She could have killed him easily enough-
Meanwhile, he’d done all he could for Mick-or rather, Mick’s wife, whom he’d never met. At least this way,
The late morning sun glinted off the hood of the pickup. Pender flipped the sun visor down and found a pair of
And there was no denying that it felt awfully exhilarating to be the Lone Ranger at long, long last. No Bureau-cracy to hem him in, no higher-ups to thwart him, and only one imperative to follow: find Ulysses Maxwell and take the sonofabitch
10
“Dr. Irene?”
Irene took off the headphones, paused Vivaldi’s “Four Seasons” in the middle of the pizzicato winter ice storm. “Yes, dear?”
“I’ve made up my mind-I’m going with Lyssy.”
“Are you absolutely sure that’s what you want to do?”
“Um,
“What’s that?”
“I want you to put me under again and bring Lilith back instead.”
“It’s the best thing,” Lily explained to him. “She’ll be a lot more use than I would-and I couldn’t stand it if we got captured again. And maybe Dr. Irene could put in some kind of posthypnotic suggestion, so if we made it to someplace safe…” In her mind’s eye she saw the beach again, the white sand and the palm trees. “…if you still