I looked up. McGee’s eyes were filled with horror. I tracked them.
They were fixed on Pomerleau’s retreating back.
My lungs stopped. My heart stopped. I felt the blood drain from my face.
Terror in the hospital.
A face behind a camcorder.
Residue-free hands.
Homolka, a willing participant in her husband’s depravity.
I knew!
I shot to my feet.
Pomerleau was moving down the hall as though hot-wired. I heard a sickening crack, then a thud.
I raced toward the foyer. The door was open.
Anne lay facedown with her head on the jamb, legs splayed across the linoleum.
I peered into the night. No sign of Pomerleau.
“Annie!” I squatted and felt her throat for a pulse.
Too late, I heard movement behind me. The door angled inward, jammed the heel of Anne’s boot.
Before I could turn, light exploded in my head.
I fell into blackness.
36
SECONDS LATER, OR SO IT SEEMED, I FELT MY BRAIN ELBOWING my skull, aggressively seeking more space. I opened my eyes and moved my head. Particles of shattered glass winged through my vision. I closed my eyes and tried to assess.
My chest burned. I was lying on my left side and shoulder. I swallowed, tried to sit up. My arms and legs wouldn’t work. I realized they were under and behind me.
Slowly, awareness crept in. I couldn’t feel my hands. My feet. I had to move.
Tightening my abs, I again tried to rise to my knees.
Nausea enveloped me. I vomited.
Using my ankles and hips, I tried to push back from the mess. The effort made me retch again and again until my stomach offered nothing but bile.
I lay a moment, breathing deeply, fumbling for explanations. Where was I? How long had I been there?
Gingerly, I rolled my head. A stab of pain almost caused me to cry out.
I tried. My thoughts wouldn’t congeal into recognizable pictures.
Mold. Ratty fabric. Wood. Something else. A chemical cleaner? Kerosene?
Rough fibers scratching my cheek. Grit in my mouth. Dust in my nostrils. A carpet?
Wind. A branch striking glass. The creaking and breathing of a house interior.
My pulse hammering in my ears.
Muffled footsteps. A hollow clunk.
Distant. Someone moving. In another room?
I opened my eyes again.
I lay on a very dirty carpet. I could see a carved wooden leg, some cranberry upholstery, and the edge of a tattered blanket.
Recognition! I was in Catts’s parlor. The lamp was now off.
A door slammed, then silence.
Armchair ahead. Another slamming sound at a greater distance behind me. My brain was assimilating information with the speed of continental drift.
Had someone used a rear entrance? In the kitchen? Catts’s kitchen.
I tried to call up the floor plan from my previous visits. It wasn’t there.
I held my breath, listened. Not a sound in the house. The blood in my head hammered on. One heartbeat. A