'He said you saved Alison's life. Thank you, Natalie. Thank you so much.'
'I'm glad I got there in time.'
'Will you tell me what happened? I got the sheriff's version, but he never explained why you were at the Saunders house.'
Natalie propped her pillows against the headboard and settled in for a long chat. After all, it wouldn't kill her to keep Viveca company, if only over the phone, while the woman waited to hear if her daughter would survive. She described finding Paige missing and ended with the E.M.S. taking away Alison.
'I don't know if it was chance or destiny that put you there in time to save Alison,' Viveca said. 'My husband always said the universe was chaotic. I like to believe everything happens for a reason.'
'I'm not sure where I stand on that issue. Viveca, why do you think Alison was at the Saunders house?'
'Alison used to fantasize that she was Ariel. I thought she'd grown out of it, but lately she's been talking about Ariel again. She has some books on reincarnation. I believe she thinks she's the reincarnation of Ariel. I've suspected she's been going out at night.' This Natalie already knew. 'I think she was going to the Saunders house pretending, or maybe actually believing, she's Ariel.'
'That makes sense,' Natalie said slowly. 'Did the sheriff tell you Paige and Jimmy saw her there a few nights ago?'
'No, but I'm not surprised. I should have kept a closer eye on her, but she resents the amount of supervision she does have. Mrs. Krebbs during the day, me at night. But I can't stay up all night. I have a job. I should have hired a nurse. That's what your father told me to do. I was considering it when suddenly she improved during the time I was seeing Eugene.'
Natalie couldn't resist plunging on. 'Viveca, why did you stop dating Eugene?'
Natalie could feel the woman's hesitation. 'Because of Alison.'
'But you said she improved during your time with him.'
'She did, but… well, there were complications. She seemed to like Eugene too much.' Viveca sounded pained. Had Alison actually tried to seduce Eugene? Natalie wondered. 'I think Alison has only been slipping out at night for a couple of weeks,' Viveca rushed on. 'She's been so much worse lately.'
'My father thinks she needed medication, but Warren couldn't prescribe. Why did you let him treat Alison?'
'She refused to see anyone else after she met him.'
'She had,a crush on him, didn't she?'
Viveca sighed. 'I suppose so. But it was only slight, a little girl thing. Nothing serious.'
I wouldn't be too sure about that, Natalie thought. 'Whether it was serious or not, you don't have to worry about it anymore. Now that Warren is gone, Alison will be seeing someone else, and I think it should be a psychiatrist this time.'
'It will be. If she makes it.'
Natalie had never been one to spout false optimism, but Viveca sounded desolate. 'Alison is young and physically healthy. Those things are certainly in her favor.'
'Yes, she's in very good health,' Viveca said hopefully. 'Flu and a few colds. That's all she's ever had. Never even measles.'
'She must have a strong immune system.' Probably be cause she never went to school like most kids, Natalie thought, she hasn't been exposed to many contagious illnesses. 'Her burns are minor.'
'It's just the slashed throat that bothers me.' Viveca gave a brittle laugh, then swallowed hard. 'I'm sorry.'
'You're entitled.'
'Natalie, you don't know who did this to Alison?'
'If I did, I would have told the police. The attack was over when I arrived.'
'If only you'd gotten there a few minutes earlier.'
'I know. Maybe I could have stopped the whole thing, but at least the kids were there. I have a feeling the attacker was flustered, hurried, so he bungled what otherwise would have been a murder.'
'Well, thank God for that. You're sure the children didn't see this person?'
'No, they couldn't possibly identify him,' Natalie said forcefully. When she'd told Nick that the would-be killer had looked directly at Paige, he'd turned ghastly white and immediately ordered round-the-clock protection for her and for Jimmy. But he told Natalie to emphasize that the kids had seen nothing. The more people who heard this, the better. Word spread fast in Port Ariel. The killer must be made to think he was safe.
Otherwise, Paige and Jimmy could be the next victims.
His head pounded and he was desperately thirsty. Jeff Lindstrom was also desperately afraid.
He had no idea how long he'd been here in the dark. Until what he guessed to be an hour ago he'd been unconscious from the last injection. Yesterday-or was it the day before?-he was standing by a window, grinning with satisfaction as he looked out to see a bright red cardinal flying past, when pain suddenly erupted in his head and blazed down his neck. It had just reached his back when his vision blurred and he crashed to his knees, then slid into oblivion. And now he was here.
But where was here! He sat on a concrete floor. The chill of it penetrated his jeans and his hips already hurt from the long contact with the hard surface. A slightly musty, dank smell reached his nostrils. He felt chilly in his suit pants and long-sleeved cotton shirt. His jacket was gone and so was one shoe. Dried blood clung to the ragged heel of a gray sock.
A tight blindfold covered his eyes. A strong cloth had been twisted, forced between his teeth, and tied behind his head. His mouth was abominably dry, his lips cracked. Metal handcuffs secured his hands behind a pole. He flexed his ankles against the cuffs shackling his feet. He bent his legs at the knees, planting his feet flat on the floor, and pushed himself against the pole as he rose painfully. He felt as if he'd been kicked all over. He was certain at least one rib was broken. His legs trembled.
Panic rushed over him. He heard a long, rough sob and realized it came from him. He would have been embarrassed, but no one was around to hear. At least he didn't think anyone was near. He couldn't see. But he could hear. He went perfectly still, forcing his breath through his nose rather than his mouth. No sound.
He squeezed his eyes behind the blindfold. Just this morning he thought he had it made. No one in the family thought much of him. Most family members wouldn't socialize with him because they thought he'd hit them up for money. And he usually did. He'd always acted like none of it mattered. After all, who cared what the family thought of him? he asked himself in the mirror each morning. Who cared what his idiot ex-wife thought of him?
But he did care and it made him feel hopeless. Until lately. At last all the failures, the family scorn, the loss of the pretty, bubble-headed wife he'd inexplicably loved- none of it mattered because he was going to even the score. Not even the run-in with Meredith had bothered him. The big man with his righteous outrage. The sheriff didn't have a clue what was really going on. It had been funny.
But not any more.
Jeff couldn't believe this was happening to him. Life sure hadn't been any bowl of cherries. He'd always had lousy luck, things had always gone wrong for him, but not this wrong. Not-
A noise. He cocked his head. A door opening and not too far away. His breath quickened, whistling around the narrow gag. Footsteps. He tried to speak, but nothing came out except unintelligible grunts.
'Be quiet. I can't understand anything you're saying and I don't want to.'
Jeff fell silent for a moment. Then a wave of fury mixed with fear overcame him and he burst forth again with a series of staccato grunts. A hand slammed against his face. The sting brought tears to his covered eyes.
'I told you to shut up.' A sigh. 'But I suppose it doesn't matter now.'
'Why doesn't it matter?' Jeff screamed inwardly. He lunged forward. The handcuffs clanged against the metal pipe and pain raged through his shoulders.
'Now that was stupid. Useless.'
Jeff tried to kick. The shackled right foot pulled the left out from under him. He slammed to the floor so hard his teeth snapped on the gag. He sat in shock for a moment before the pain registered. A breathy moan escaped him.
'Stop thrashing around. You're only hurting yourself and there's no need for pain.'
No need for pain? Jeff thought with a surge of hope. He wasn't going to be hurt. But if he wasn't to be hurt, then what?