children. They would never be out of her sight for more time than was absolutely necessary. They would never have secrets, for secrets meant that they could get into trouble without her knowing it, and they would live lives inextricably bound up with her own so that they could become a family such as the world had never seen before. Never again would she trouble herself with her own selfish pleasures. She would concentrate on her children completely.

And so she did.

And by the time Peter was four, the snickers and smirks and clucks of concern could be heard among those few friends who still had any contact with her at all.

She was too much of a good mother, Evelyn was. In wanting to protect her children'Now, you're sure you don't feel as if you're coming down with anything?' she'd sternly ask anyone who called to say they might drop byshe became their jailer. Peter was rarely allowed to play outdoors, and then only when he was accompanied by his mother. Doris fell from her bicycle when she was five years old and was not allowed to ride another one until she was twelve. Evelyn even controlled their pleasures. Peter, for instance, took painting lessons and piano lessons and dancing lessonsexactly what a refined and sophisticated mother would wish for her son, but not necessarily what a boy would pick if he had any choice in the matter. Doris was turned into a parody of old-fashioned 'female' virtur. She was taught to cook, sew, serve tea, sit quietly as Evelyn and Peter discussed things (Peter was David's surrogate, and as such he would always be more important than Doris), and to look pretty and proper even when she was running a fever or hacking her way through a terrible cough and cold.

And so they had their little world.

The children were taken to and from school in an imposing black limousine driven by a liveried driver who packed a snub-nosed. 38 in a shoulder-holster. School friends visited only occasionally, and rarely did Evelyn approve of them. She encouraged her two children to be not merely brother and sister but best friends. Even when they were in high school, Peter and Doris hung out together. You saw them at the movie theater, the malls, the high-school games. There were a lot of jokes about them. They were both strikingly good-lookingindeed, they looked a great deal alike, with that kind of blue-eyed blondness that verges on the almost too-perfectand they were quiet and insular to the point that many considered them arrogant.

When college came, Evelyn went through the charade of honoring Peter's wish to go to Harvard, but she had her doctor concoct an illness for her that would make Peter want to stay closer to home. He ended up going to Northwestern, as would Doris in a few years, and carried on living at home.

Three years after finishing college, Peter married Jill and his life wasat least as Evelyn saw itforever ruined. Much against her will, Evelyn accepted Jill and invited her to become one of the family here on the estate. But Jill was coarse and of the world. After a year of this, she wanted to take up her old occupation of professional photography again. Work in the city. Oh, she'd come back home every night but invariably she'd bring with her the sins of the citythe violence, the disease, the vulgarity. The spirit of the mansion would be violated.

At this time, Peter began killing women. But Evelyn knew who was really to blame. Jill had betrayed Peter's faith. He'd always assumed that she would be happy living every day in the mansion, not needing to see othersespecially not 'city' othersand when she betrayed him, Peter went insane and started stalking women…

***

At the same time that Rick Corday was going to check the contents of his shed, Evelyn Daye Tappley was just coming out of the front door of her mansion.

Her two servants, the pair who had been with Evelyn even while her husband had been alive, watched the small but robust woman go down the front steps and walk over to the shiny black 1951 Packard sedan that had belonged to Clark. His favorite car. And she kept it perfect.

She climbed in and started the engine. It ran flawlessly. She had it serviced every 1,000 miles.

The servants watched as she drove down to the gate where a gray-uniformed guard stepped forth. He gave her a little salute and then opened the gate.

Moments later, she was gone, headed west into the tall timber where the mausoleum lay, the mausoleum in which both Clark and David now rested, moved here when she came to this estate. Of course, now there was a third person interred therePeter. Following his execution, she had brought the casket back here.

No matter what the weather, Evelyn drove into the timber once a day to pay her respects.

The servants looked at each other now and shook their heads. It was very sad, what Evelyn had done to her children in the name of protecting them.

CHAPTER 5

Shortly after leaving his shed on the north side, Rick Corday pulled his blue Volvo into the two-stall garage of a handsome suburban home with wood and stone accents, the closest neighbor being half a block away. In the windy night, the place was dark and just a bit ominous. But maybe that was because Rick lived here and knew about the basement… And what went on in the basement.

He went in through the kitchen door, glad to be home. He enjoyed this place, its sunken great room with fireplace and built-in bookcases and adjoining formal dining room with built-in china cabinets.

He went to the bathroom, relieved himself, washed up, and then took off his suit and did one hundred one- handed pushups. Then he changed arms and did one hundred more.

In his underwear, he sat on the edge of the double bed and dialed the phone, glancing at the brocaded gold wallpaper and Louis XIV furnishings that lent the room a formal if rather stiff elegance.

The air-conditioning made everything chilly. Too chilly, probably, for some people. But coldness had a productive effect on Corday and so he appreciated it.

On the night-stand between the beds, he saw the note, the note that told him that his best friend, his good and true lover, had been cruising again.

He dialed a long-distance number.

'Hello,' said Adam Morrow.

'I'm ready to roll,' Corday said.

'Goddammit, Rick. I asked you to wait until I was there.'

'Everything's ready. We may not get this opportunity again.'

Adam decided to stay as cool as possible. 'So it's going well, then?'

'Professionally,' Corday replied, getting that hurt tone in his voice, 'everything is going fine.'

'What's that supposed to mean?'

'It means that the job is doing fine,' Corday said.

'The job is doing fine,' Adam echoed, 'but we aren't, is that it?'

Corday didn't want to say it, loathed his bitchy side, but couldn't stop himself. 'You know when you asked me to take some of your clothes to the cleaners? A note fell out of your pocket.'

Silence. Then, 'Are we reading each other's private mail now?'

'It's not private mail. It fell out of your pocket!'

'Same thing.'

'Seems you and some guy named Wyn became very good friends when you were in Miami a few weeks ago.'

Silence. 'I'm a lot better than I used to be.'

'True. Now you're only unfaithful every month. It used to be you were unfaithful every week.'

'You need to concentrate on the woman, Rick. Forget about us for the time being. We'll work it out.'

'Right,' Corday said. 'We'll work it out.' Then, 'You think you'll ever change?'

'I want to change. For your sake.'

'You should want to change for your own sake.'

Laugh. 'You've been watching Oprah again, haven't you?'

'I'm serious.'

'So am I, Rick. You listen to all that touchy-feely crap on TV and you think that's how everybody should be. A

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