Jo asked. “What did you find?”
Cleo ran her tongue across her lips then looked directly at Jo. “The key.”
Chapter Seventeen
After the seance, Cleo pleaded a headache and exhaustion. “This kind of thing always leaves me feeling like a limp rag,” she said, smiling weakly. From the corner of her eye, she saw Daniel staring at her, his expression unreadable.
“Can I give you a lift back to your motel?” Dr. Campbell asked.
Cleo jumped at the offer-anything to get out of riding with Daniel. She was pretty sure he’d been watching her throughout the reading and knew she’d faked the whole thing. The last thing she wanted was another interrogation.
“That would be great,” Cleo said, gathering up the incense and candles.
She’d briefly thought about trying to cut a deal with Jo, maybe settling for a thousand dollars if she let her go now, but Cleo no longer wanted anything from the town of Egypt except to leave it.
Outside, Dr. Campbell opened the passenger door for her.
“You were amazing back there,” he said, keeping his hands in the ten-and-two-o’clock position.
“I can’t take credit,” Cleo said. It was so much easier talking to Campbell than to Daniel. She could make small talk. Not very well, but she could do it. “It just comes to me.”
“It doesn’t matter how it happens. It’s still amazing. I’d like to hear more about it,” he said, pulling up in front of her motel room. “Would you like to get something to eat tonight? So we can talk?”
He didn’t want to talk about her
To her relief, he didn’t argue. “Maybe another time.”
“Yeah,” she said, knowing she would be long gone in a matter of hours. “Maybe another time.” She grabbed her bag and stepped from the vehicle. “Thanks for the ride.”
He nodded and gave her a friendly smile.
Inside the motel room, Cleo packed. In the process, she came across Premonition’s squeaky toys, worm medication, the special shampoo that kept his skin from getting itchy and flaky, and his vaccination papers. The harness she would keep. Maybe she’d get another dog someday.
Done packing, she lay down and waited for dark. She would need to get some rest if she was going to spend the night hitchhiking. Minutes later, she fell asleep and immediately began to dream.
Laughter. Somebody was laughing. It came from somewhere deep inside the wall behind her head.
She forced herself to wake up and found the motel room cast in shadow, the way it had been that morning, so dark it could have been night.
Laughter.
Coming from the next room.
She sat up, her bare feet rubbing against the clammy shag rug. The orange shag rug.
The laughter was still there, just behind the wall. Shrill laughter. A woman’s drunken laughter. Between the bursts of laughter, Cleo heard the rumble of a man’s deep voice.
She stood and moved closer, thinking to press her ear to the wall. She put out her hand and it disappeared into the wall as if dipped in murky water.
She should have known, because it had the creepy, slanted mood of the old dream, the pumpkin dream. There was a feeling of expectation, of knowing something bad was going to happen.
She stuck her arm deeper into the wall, all the way to her shoulder. Even though she wanted to wake up, even though she didn’t want to do what she was doing, she followed her arm through the wall…until she stood in a mirror-image room of the one she’d just left. In this room, the orange bedspread was still on the bed. The orange curtains still covered the window.
She thought she was alone, but gradually realized she wasn’t. A man stood in the center of the room. His back was to her. He was bent, concentrating on a task. As she watched, he gathered the corners of the orange bedspread and began wrapping something, rolling something.
Finished, he picked up the bundle. It must have been heavy, because he almost collapsed. He let out a grunt and tried to shift his weight. The bundle slipped from his fingers and slumped to the floor. He mumbled and cursed, stepping over the bedspread, grabbing it by one end. Walking backward, he dragged it toward the door, leaving a dark stain on the rug.
Cleo followed the stain, followed the man out the door to where an open car trunk waited. He looked up at Cleo.
And now she could see it was Harvey.
“Aren’t you going to help me hide the key?” he asked with no surprise or alarm. “Grab that end.”
She didn’t want to touch the orange fabric, but she reached down, gripping it tightly with her fingers.
They lifted. The bundle hardly weighed anything. Why had he needed her help?
“Get in,” he said, motioning for her to get inside the trunk along with the bundle.
She shook her head.
“Go on. I’ll give you a ride.”
She did need a ride. That was right. “Out of town?” she asked.
“Anywhere.”
“You have the key, don’t you?”
“I
“I don’t understand.”
“You’re not supposed to. This is a dream.”
She looked at him more closely and realized it wasn’t Harvey standing there, but Dr. Campbell. It had been Campbell all along.
“I hope you’re flossing,” he told her.
“I am.”
“Don’t lie to me,” he said in a calm voice. “I’m sorry. I didn’t know you could read my mind.”
“Get in the trunk.”
“I can’t.”
“You have to get in.”
She turned and tried to run, but her feet were mired in something thick and deep. The rug. The orange shag rug. She couldn’t make any progress. She knew he was right behind her, right behind her, right behind her-
She felt a hand on her arm.
She screamed and turned.
Cleo came awake, her heart racing, her clothes damp with sweat.
She sat up, the creepy sensation of the dream still heavy in her.
That it was dark, truly dark, was the first thing she noticed as she waited for her heart to stop pounding. She groped for the bedside lamp, found it, and clicked it on. Almost 9:00 p.m. Her body had that heavy, gritty feeling that came with a long sleep that had taken place at the wrong time of day. On the foot of the bed were Premonition’s things. It was still too early to leave town, but she had to get out of the motel for a few hours.
She cleaned up, put on a dry top-unfortunately, one she’d worn before-grabbed the stuff from the end of the bed, and headed out into the night.