but not as faint as before, either: the vile aroma of rotting meat.

Maybe she had only dreamed that she'd awakened but was still in the

grip of the nightmare. Her heart slammed against her breastbone, her

breath caught in her throat, and she groped for the light switch, which

was on her side of the door. If it had been on the other side, she

might not have had the courage to reach into that coiled blackness to

feel for it.

She missed it on the first and second tries, dared not look away from

the darkness before her, felt blindly where she recalled having seen

it, almost shouted at Toby to wake up and run, at last found the

switch--thank God-clicked it. Light. The deserted landing. Nothing

there. Of course. What else?

Empty steps curving down and out of sight. A stair tread creaked

below. Oh, Jesus. She stepped onto the landing. She wasn't wearing

slippers. The wood was cool and rough under her bare feet. Another

creak, softer than before.

Settling noises. Maybe. She moved off the landing, keeping her left

hand against the concave curve of the outer wall to steady herself.

Each step that she descended brought a new step into view ahead of

her.

At the first glimpse of anyone, she would turn and run back up the

stairs, into Toby's room, throw the door shut, snap the dead bolt in

place. The lock couldn't be opened from the stairwell, only from

inside the house, so they would be safe. From below came a furtive

click, a faint thud--as of a door being pulled shut as quietly as

possible.

Suddenly she was less disturbed by the prospect of confrontation than

by the possibility that the episode would end inconclusively. Needing

to know, one way or the other, Heather shook off timidity. She ran

down the stairs, making more than enough noise to reveal her presence,

along the convex curve of the inner wall, around, around, into the

vestibule at the bottom. Deserted. She tried the door to the

kitchen.

It was locked and required a key to be opened from this side. She had

no key. Presumably, an intruder would not have one, either.

The other door led to the back porch. On this side, the dead bolt

operated with a thumb-turn. It was locked. She disengaged it, pulled

open the door, stepped onto the porch. Deserted. And as far as she

could see, no one was sprinting away across the backyard. Besides,

although an intruder would not have needed a key to exit by that door,

he would have needed one to lock it behind him, for it operated only

with a key from the outside.

Somewhere an owl issued a mournful interrogative. Windless, cold, and

humid, the night air seemed not like that of the outdoors but like the

dank and ever so slightly fetid atmosphere of a cellar. She was

alone.

But she didn't feel alone.

She felt . . . watched. . 'For God's sake, Heth,' she said, 'what the

hell's the matter with you?' She retreated into the vestibule and

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