'The sixth, Laura Wilcox, is missing,' Sam said. 'Which leaves only Jean Sheridan. I warned her yesterday to trust no one, but I'm not sure if that's going far enough. She may need actual protection.'
'Where is she now?' Stevens asked.
'At her hotel. She called me around nine o'clock last night from her hotel room to thank me for something I gave her yesterday. She'd been at a cocktail party given by the president of Stonecroft Academy, and was having dinner sent up to her room. She's meeting her daughter's adoptive parents tonight and said she hoped she'd be able to calm down and get a good night's sleep.'
Sam hesitated, then continued. 'Rich, sometimes you've got to trust your instincts. Joy is doing a great job digging through the files on the Stonecroft deaths. Jean Sheridan would turn me down flat if I suggested she get a bodyguard, and she'd feel the same way if you offered her protection. But she likes me, and if I tell her I want to hang around with her whenever she leaves the hotel, I think she'd go along with it.'
'I think that's a good idea, Sam,' Stevens agreed. 'All we need is to have something happen to Dr. Sheridan.'
'One more thing,' Sam added. 'I'd like to put surveillance on one of the reunion guys who's still in town. His name is Mark Fleischman, Dr. Mark Fleischman. He's a psychiatrist.'
Joy looked at Sam, her eyebrows raised in astonishment. 'Dr. Fleischman! Sam, he gives the most sensible advice I've ever heard from anybody on television. A couple of weeks ago he did a program warning parents about kids who feel rejected at home or at school, and how some of them grow up damaged and emotionally warped. We see enough of that, don't we?'
'Yes, we do. But from what I understand, Mark Fleischman got badly hurt both at home and in school,' Sam said grimly, 'so maybe he was talking about himself.'
'See who's available for surveillance,' Rich Stevens said. 'One more thing-we'd better list Laura Wilcox as a missing person. This is the fifth day she's been gone.'
'I think that if we were being totally honest, we'd be listing her as 'missing, presumed dead,'' Sam said flatly.
79
After she hung up from Laura, Jean splashed water on her face, ran a comb through her hair, threw on her jogging suit, dropped her cell phone in her pocket, grabbed her pocketbook, and rushed out of the hotel to her car. Storm King Lookout on Route 218 was fifteen minutes from the hotel. It was still early, and traffic would be light. Normally a careful driver, she pressed her foot on the accelerator and watched the speedometer climb to seventy miles an hour. The clock showed that it was two minutes past seven.
Laura is desperate, she thought. Why does she want to meet me there? Is she planning to hurt herself? The mental image of Laura getting there first and maybe being desperate enough to climb over the railing and throw herself off haunted Jean. The Lookout was hundreds of feet above the Hudson.
The car skidded on the final turn, and for a frightening moment Jean was not sure if she could straighten it, but then the wheels righted and she could see that a car was parked near the telescope at the observation site. Let it be Laura, she prayed. Let her be there. Let her be all right.
Her tires screeched as she pulled into the parking area, turned off her engine, got out, and rushed to fling open the passenger door of the other car. 'Laura – ' Her greeting died on her lips. The man behind the wheel was wearing a mask, a plastic mask that was the face of an owl. The eyes of the owl, with black pupils set in pools of yellow iris, were surrounded by tufts of white down that gradually changed in color, deepening to brown around the beak and lips.
He was holding a gun.
Terrified, Jean turned to run, but a familiar voice ordered, 'Get in the car, Jean, unless you want to die here. And do not speak my name. It is forbidden.'
Her car was only a few feet away. Did she dare try to run for it? Would he shoot her? He was raising the gun.
Numb with fear, she stood uncertainly; then, playing for time, she slowly started to put her foot into the car. I'll jump back, she thought. I'll duck. He'll have to get out to shoot me. I may be able to get back in my car. But in a lightning-quick gesture, he grabbed her arm, and pulled her the rest of the way into the car, then reached past her and slammed the door.
In an instant he was backing up, turning onto Route 218, heading toward Cornwall. He ripped off the mask and grinned at her. 'I am The Owl,' he said. 'I am The Owl. You must never call me by any other name. Do you understand?'
He's insane, Jean thought as she nodded. There were no other cars on the road. If one came along, could she lean over and blow the horn? Better to take her chances here on the road than let him get her alone someplace where she couldn't get help. 'I am… an… ow-owl… and… and… I… lllive… in… a…' he chanted. 'Remember, Jeannie? Remember?'
'I remember.' Her lips began to form his name and then froze before any sound came. He's going to kill me, she thought. I'll grab the wheel and try to cause an accident.
He turned and smiled at her, an openmouthed smirk. The pupils of his eyes were black.
My cell phone, she thought. It's in my pocket. She shrank back against the seat and fumbled for it. She managed to slide it out and edge it to her side where he couldn't see it, but before she could attempt to open the cover and dial 911, The Owl's right hand shot over.
'We're getting into traffic,' he said. His strong fingers, crooked like talons, flew to her neck.
She jerked back away from him and, with her last conscious thought, pushed the cell phone between the seatback and the cushion.
When she woke up, she was tied to a chair; there was a gag on her mouth. The room was dark, but she could make out the figure of a woman lying on the bed across the room, a woman in a dress that sparkled and caught the tiny glimmers of light that broke through the sides of the thick shades.
What happened? Jean thought. My head hurts. Why can't I move? Is this a dream? No, I was going to meet Laura. I got in the car and-
'You're awake, Jeannie, aren't you?'
It was an effort to turn her head. He was standing in the doorway. 'I surprised you, didn't I, Jean? Do you remember the school play in the second grade? Everybody laughed at me. You laughed at me. Remember?'
No, I didn't, Jean thought. I felt sorry for you.
'Jean, answer me.'
The gag was so tight that she wasn't sure if he could hear her response: 'I remember.' To be sure he understood, she nodded her head vigorously.
'You're smarter than Laura,' he said. 'Now I must go. I'll leave you two together. But I'll be back soon. And I'll have someone with me you've been
Then he was gone. From the bed Jean heard a whimpering sound. Then, her voice muffled by the gag but still audible, Laura began moaning: 'Jeannie,…promised…wouldn't hurt Lily… but he's going…going to kill her, too.'
80
At a quarter of nine, on his way to the Glen-Ridge House, Sam decided that it was not too early to call Jean. When she didn't answer her room telephone, he was disappointed but not worried. If she had dinner in her room last night, she has probably gone to the coffee shop for breakfast. He debated about calling her on her cell phone but decided against it. By the time I place the call, I'll be there, he thought.
The first sense that something might be wrong came when he could not find her in the coffee shop, and again when she did not answer her room phone. The desk clerk could not be sure if she had gone out for a walk. He was the man with the funny colored hair. 'That's not to say she