For a time, she was troubled and of course they gave her shots with long silver needles, and her doctors cooed and whispered and reassured, but she did not tell them of course. Not about the hole in the tower where the serpent had slithered free, nor the way the serpent had come across the floor to her and-
She just accepted their shots and slept their sleep and mouthed their words…
…and then one day at last she went home.
FOUR MONTHS LATER
As usual, Marie fixed dinner and brought it into the living room where her mother sat in her pink robe and her pink fuzzy slippers. She really was a very good looking middle aged woman.
'Program started yet?' Marie said, taking one of those long, crippled steps that she would never get used to.
'Not yet, hon.'
'Good. I want to see it.'
Her mother looked at her curiously. 'You're sure, hon? I mean, you're sure you feel up to it?'
Marie sighed, then shrugged. 'Uh, I guess so. If it gets too much I'll-I'll just go in my room and read.'
Marie sat down on the couch next to her mother and watched TV. There was a station break and a dogfood commercial and a tampon commercial and a Pepsi commercial and then a familiar face and voice filled the screen.
'Good evening. This is Chris Holland of Channel 3 News.' Then the camera shot widened out and in the night behind her you could see Hastings House, including the tower. 'Six months ago, a man escaped from this mental hospital and went on a murderous rampage in this city that lasted thirty-six hours and claimed five lives. In the past, other people who stayed in this hospital also became murderers. There is a rumour this happened because of the strange powers to be found in the tower you're looking at now.
'Are there any truths to these allegations? Exactly what's in the tower anyway? And is it true that a hundred years ago a very powerful and sinister cult buried the bones of the children it murdered in the ground where the tower now stands?
'Some people familiar with these cases insist that the descendants of the cult still operate in this city, helping possessed individuals find their prey and kill them to satisfy a dark god that takes the form of a serpent.'
The camera pushed in now for a close-up of Chris's face.
'I've spent the last six months doing an intensive investigation of my own into all these questions. In fact, I should be a little bit grateful to the whole thing. The Dobyns murders saved my job. And even got me a modest promotion.'
She shook her head fetchingly. 'But I'm not here to talk about myself. I'm here to talk about nineteen murders that have taken place in this city over the past one hundred years. Murders that may not be as commonplace as once seemed.'
And with that, they were into another commercial.
The TV show lasted sixty minutes, and during it the trouble in Kathleen's stomach began again.
Ever since her stay at Hastings House and her strange dreams of visiting the tower late one night, she had felt a curious pressure in her belly. Just lately there was movement down there, too, as if something were moving around inside.
She wished she'd never gone to stay at Hastings House. But following the night when Richard Dobyns raped and nearly killed Marie right here in the apartment, Kathleen had gone into a depression so deep that no amount of outpatient counselling seemed to help. So the psychologist she saw recommended a brief stay in Hastings House. Marie had visited her every day. That was the only thing that had made Kathleen's stay tolerable.
'I really like her, don't you?'
'Hmm? I'm sorry, hon. I guess my mind was drifting off.'
'Chris Holland. Don't you think she's doing a good job?' Marie said.
'Oh, yes, hon. A very good job.'
And just then, Kathleen felt it again, the sensation of something heavy in her stomach shifting position.
What could it be?
FOUR NIGHTS LATER
In the alley, behind the tavern, you could hear it all, the cursing and the laughter, the sudden bursts of excitement over the game on the television and the equally sudden anger as chairs were thrown back and men started throwing punches at each other. It was this way every night-month in, month out; year in, year out. The only things that changed were the country and western tunes on the jukebox and even they had a certain dead sameness in melody and lyrics alike.
The woman waited in the alley. The night wind chafed her face and legs. Sundown, a quick brilliant red and gold, had died like a guttering fire along the horizon and now there was only darkness and the cold steady chill of the wind.
She had been here, in the shadows of a large, ancient garage directly across from the back door of the tavern, for twenty minutes.
Certainly the man would come along soon enough.
And just then the door opened to a rush of music and laughter and the stink of beer and cigarette smoke and then he was there.
He was probably in his early thirties, chunky, balding, sort of cute in a chipmunk kind of way, dressed in a heavily lined zipper jacket, faded blue jeans and work boots, and dangling a steel lunch pail from the thick fingers of his right hand.
He stood in the wind, teetering as if he were so drunk he would pitch over on his side, finishing his cigarette and looking up the alley to the parking lot. He was driving, of course. American roads were filled with people at least as drunk as he was.
It was a narrow little alley, almost a cul-de-sac, and so when she took three steps out of the shadows of the garage, he saw her at once.
He took his cigarette from his lips and flicked it to the ground. 'You look like you're lost, lady.'
It was easy enough to see on his suddenly smiling face that he was quite appreciative of her good looks, even if she was ten years older than him.
She shrugged. 'Just kind of lonely, I guess.'
The only real light in the alley was the soft blue neon reading TAVERN above the back door. You could see he was trying to get a better look at her but that there wasn't enough light.
'You with somebody inside?' he said. He was still weaving a bit but lust had given him an edge now. At least he didn't look as if he were going to fall over any longer.
'No. I'm alone.'
She let her words sink in.
'Now that's a real shame.'
For the first time, she smiled. She had a good smile and she knew it.
He got excited and put his hand out to take her shoulder. 'I got a car.'
'You got somewhere in mind to go?'
'Uh, sure.' She could tell by his hesitation that he was married. He was trying to make some quick plans. 'This other little tavern I know. You can get real cosy in the back.'
He pulled her closer now, just the way she wanted him to.
She brought the straight razor up from her coat, flicked open the blade, and slashed it quick and deep across his throat.
He was so disoriented from shock and liquor that all he could do was stand there and gape at her. He didn't even seem to notice a pain yet.
She helped him appreciate the moment better by slashing the razor back across his throat.
This time he tried to scream.