Authors: Dean Koontz
chapter 35
HE LEFT TOWN BY A CIRCUITOUS ROUTE AND
saw no one following.
With no corpse burrito in the Explorer, Billy risked exceeding the speed limit most of the way to the southern end of the county. A hot wind quarreled at the broken-out window in the driver’s door as he crossed the Napa city limits at 1:52
P.M.
Napa is a quaint, rather picturesque town, for the most part naturally so, not by dint of politicians and corporations conspiring to reconceive it as a theme park on the model of Disneyland, a fate of many places in California.
Harry Avarkian, Billy’s attorney, had offices downtown, not far from the courthouse, on a street lined with ancient olive trees. He was expecting Billy and greeted him with a bear hug.
Fiftyish, tall and solid, avuncular, with a rubbery face and quick smile, Harry looked like the spokesman for a miracle hair restorer. He had a head of wiry black hair so thick that it looked as though a barber might have to tend to it daily, a walrus mustache, and such a thatch of crisp black hairs on the backs of his big hands that he looked as if he might be prone to hibernate in winter.
He worked at an antique partner’s desk, so that when Billy sat opposite him, the relationship didn’t seem like that of attorney and client but like that of friends engaged in a business enterprise.
After the usual how-ya-beens and talk of the heat, Harry said, “So what’s so important that we couldn’t do it by phone?”
“It’s not that I didn’t want to talk on the phone,” Billy lied. The rest was true enough: “I had to come down here for a couple other things, so I figured I might as well sit down with you in person and ask about what’s troubling me.”
“So hit me with your questions, and let’s see if I know any damn thing about the law.”
“It’s about the trust fund that takes care of Barbara.”
Harry Avarkian and Gi Minh “George” Nguyen, Billy’s accountant, were the other two trustees on the three-member board.
“Just two days ago, I reviewed the second quarter’s financial statement,” Harry said. “Return was fourteen percent. Excellent in this market. Even after Barbara’s expenses, the principal is growing steadily.”
“We’re smartly invested,” Billy agreed. “But I’m lying awake at night worrying is there a way anyone could get at the pot?”
“The pot? You mean Barbara’s money? If you’ve got to worry about something, worry about an asteroid hitting the earth.”
“I worry. I can’t help it.”
“Billy, I drew up those trust documents, and they’re tighter than a gnat’s ass. Besides, with you guarding the vault for her, nobody’s going to pinch a nickel.”
“I mean if something happens to me.”
“You’re only thirty-four. From my perspective, you’re barely past puberty.”
“Mozart died younger than thirty-four.”
“This isn’t the eighteenth century, and you don’t even play the piano,” Harry said, “so the comparison makes no sense.” He frowned. “Are you sick or something?”
“I’ve felt better,” Billy admitted.
“What’s that patch on your forehead?”
Billy gave him the story about a knothole in a walnut plank. “It’s nothing serious.”
“You’re pale for summer.”
“I haven’t been fishing much. Look, Harry, I don’t have cancer or anything, but a truck could always hit me.”
“Have they been after you lately, these trucks? Have you had to dodge a few? Since when were you baptized a pessimist?”
“What about Dardre?”
Dardre was Barbara’s sister. They were twins, but fraternal, not identical. They looked nothing alike, and were radically different people, as well.
“The court not only pulled her plug,” Harry said, “they cut it off and took out her batteries.”
“I know, but—”
“She’s an Energizer Bunny of Evil, all right, but she’s as much history as the Lebne and string cheese I ate for lunch a week ago.”
Barbara and Dardre’s mother, Cicily, had been a drug addict. She had never identified their father, and on their birth certificates, the twins had their mother’s maiden name.
Cicily wound up in a psychiatric ward when the girls were two, and they were removed from their mother’s custody and placed in a foster home. Cicily died eleven months later.
Until they were five, the sisters had been shuffled through the same series of foster homes. Thereafter they were separated.
Barbara had never seen Dardre again. In fact when, at the age of twenty-one, she tracked down and tried to reestablish a relationship with her sister, she had been rebuffed.
While not as self-destructive as Cicily, Dardre had acquired her mother’s taste for illegal chemical compounds and the party life. She found her clean-and-sober sibling to be boring and uncool.
Eight years later, after extensive media attention to the case, when the insurance company settled millions on Barbara to pay for her long-term care, Dardre developed a deep emotional attachment to her sister. As Barbara’s only known blood relative, she had brought legal action to be declared sole trustee.
Fortunately, at good Harry’s urging, immediately following their engagement, Billy and Barbara had drawn and signed, in this office, simple wills naming each other as heirs and executors.
Dardre’s history, tactics, and unconcealed avarice had earned her the judge’s scorn. Her action had been dismissed with prejudice.
She had tried to get another court to reinstate her case. She had not been successful. They hadn’t heard from her in two years.
Now Billy said, “But if I died—”
“You’ve selected contingent trustees to replace you. If you’re run down by a truck, one of them will.”
“I understand. Nevertheless—”
“If you and I and George Nguyen are run down by trucks,” Harry said, “in fact if each of us is run down by three trucks, willing candidates for trustees, acceptable to the court, are standing by and ready to take over. Until they could be installed, day-to-day trust affairs would be in the hands of a bonded trust-management firm.”
“You’ve thought of everything.”
His massive mustache lifting with his smile, Harry said, “Of all my accomplishments, I’m proudest of never having yet been disbarred.”
“But if anything happened to me—”
“You’re making me nuts.”
“—is there anyone besides Dardre that we should worry about?”
“Like who?”
“Anyone.”
“No.”
“You’re sure?”
“Yes.”
“No one who could take Barbara’s money?”
Leaning forward, arms on his desk, Harry said, “What’s this all about?”
Billy shrugged. “I don’t know. Lately I’ve just been…spooked.”
After a silence, Harry said, “Maybe it’s time for you to get a life again.”
“I’ve got a life,” Billy said, his voice too sharp considering that Harry was a friend and a decent guy.
“You can look after Barbara, be faithful to her memory, and still have a life.”
“She’s not just a memory. She’s alive. Harry, you’re the last person I want to have to punch in the mouth.”
Harry sighed. “You’re right. No one can tell you what your heart should feel.”
“Hell, Harry, I’d never punch you in the mouth.”
“Did I look scared?”
Laughing softly, Billy said, “You looked you. You looked like a Muppet.”
The graceful shadows of sunlit olive trees moved on the window glass, and in the room.
After a silence, Harry Avarkian said, “There are cases in which people have come out of a botulism coma with most of their faculties intact.”
“They’re rare,” Billy acknowledged.
“Rare isn’t the same as never.”
“I try to be realistic, but I don’t really want to be.”
“I used to like vichyssoise,” Harry said. “Now if I even happen to see it on a shelf in a supermarket, I get sick to my stomach.”
While Billy had been working at the tavern one Saturday, Barbara had opened a can of soup for dinner. Vichyssoise. She made a grilled-cheese sandwich as well.
When she didn’t answer her phone Sunday morning, he went to her apartment, let himself in with his key. He found her unconscious on the bathroom floor.
At the hospital she had been treated with antitoxin promptly enough to spare her from death. And now she slept. And slept.
Until she woke, if she woke, the extent of brain damage could not accurately be determined.
The manufacturer of the soup, a reputable company, instantly pulled an entire run of vichyssoise off store shelves. Out of more than three thousand cans, only six were found to be contaminated.
None of the six showed telltale signs of swelling; therefore, in a way, Barbara’s suffering had spared at least six other people from a similar fate.
Billy never managed to find any comfort in that fact.
“She’s a lovely woman,” Harry said.
“She’s pale and thin, but she’s still beautiful to me,” Billy said. “And inside somewhere, she’s alive. She says things. I’ve told you. She’s alive in there, and thinking.”
He watched the olive-tree shadows projected onto the desk by the lens of the window.
He did not look at Harry. He didn’t want to see the pity in the attorney’s eyes.
After a while, Harry talked about the weather some more, and then Billy said, “Did you hear, at Princeton—or maybe it’s Harvard—scientists are trying to make a pig with a human brain?”
“They’re doing crap like that everywhere,” Harry said. “They never learn. The smarter they are, the dumber they get.”
“The horror of it.”
“They don’t see the horror. Just the glory and the money.”
“I don’t see the glory.”
“What glory could anyone have seen in Auschwitz? But some did.”
Following a mutual silence, Billy met Harry’s eyes. “Do I know how to cheer up a room, or what?”
“I haven’t laughed so hard since Abbott and Costello.”
chapter 36
AT AN ELECTRONICS STORE IN NAPA, BILLY
bought a compact video camera and recorder. The equipment could be used in the usual fashion or could be set instead to compile a continuous series of snapshots taken at intervals of a few seconds.
In its second mode, loaded with the proper custom disk, the system was able to provide week-long recorded surveillance similar to that in the average convenience store.
Considering that the Explorer’s broken window didn’t allow him to lock any valuables in the vehicle, he paid for his purchases and arranged to return for them in half an hour.
From the electronics store, he went in search of a newspaper-vending machine. He found one in front of a pharmacy.
The lead story concerned Giselle Winslow. The schoolteacher had been murdered in the early hours of Tuesday morning, but her body had not been found until late Tuesday afternoon, less than twenty-four hours previously.
The picture of her in the newspaper was different from the one tucked in the book on Lanny Olsen’s lap, but they were photos of the same attractive woman.
Carrying the newspaper, Billy walked to the main branch of the county library. He had a computer at home but no longer had Internet access; the library offered both.
He was alone at the cluster of work stations. Other patrons were at reading tables and prowling the stacks. Maybe the embrace of “book alternatives” wasn’t turning out to be the future of libraries, after all.
When he’d been writing fiction, he had used the World Wide Web for research. Later, it had provided distraction, escape. In the past two years, he hadn’t surfed the Web at all.
Meanwhile, things had changed. Access was faster. Searches were faster, too, and easier.
Billy typed in a search string. When he got no hits, he modified the string, then modified it again.
Drinking-age laws varied state by state. In many jurisdictions, Steve Zillis hadn’t been old enough to tend bar until he was twenty-one, so Billy dropped
bartender
from the search string.
Steve had been working at the tavern only five months. He and Billy had never swapped biographies.
Billy vaguely recalled that Steve had gone to college. He could not remember where. He added
student
to the string.
Perhaps the word
murder
was too limiting. He replaced it with
foul play.
He got one hit. From the
Denver Post.
The story dated back five years and eight months. Although Billy warned himself not to read into this discovery more than it actually contained, the information struck him as relevant.
That November, at the University of Colorado at Denver, a coed named Judith Sarah Kesselman, eighteen, had gone missing. Initially, at least, there were no signs of foul play.
In what appeared to be the first newspaper piece about the missing young woman, another UCD student, Steven Zillis, nineteen, was quoted as saying that Judith was “a wonderful girl, compassionate and concerned, a friend to everyone.” He worried because “Judi is too responsible to just go off for a couple days without telling anyone her plans.”
Another search string related to Judith Sarah Kesselman produced scores of hits. Billy steeled himself for the discovery that her dead body had been found without a face.
He went through the articles, reading closely at first. As the material became repetitive, he scanned.
Friends, relatives, and professors of Judith Kesselman were often quoted. Steven Zillis was not mentioned again.
Judging by the wealth of material available to Billy, no trace of Judith had ever been found. She vanished as completely as if she had stepped out of this universe into another.
The frequency of newspaper coverage declined steadily through Christmas of that year. It dropped sharply with the new year.
The media favors dead bodies over missing ones, blood over mystery. There is always new and exciting violence.
The last piece was dated on the fifth anniversary of Judith’s disappearance. Her hometown was Laguna Beach, California, and the article appeared in the
Orange County Register.
A columnist, sympathetic to the Kesselman family’s unresolved grief, wrote movingly about their enduring hope that Judith was still alive. Somehow. Somewhere. And one day coming home.
She had been a music major. She played piano well, and guitar. She liked gospel music. And dogs. And long walks on the beach.
The press had been provided two photos of her. In both she looked impish, amused, and gentle.
Although Billy had never known Judith Kesselman, he could not bear the promise of her fresh face. He avoided looking at her photos.
He printed selected articles for review later. He folded them inside the newspaper that he’d gotten from the vending machine.
As he was leaving the library, passing the reading tables, a man said, “Billy Wiles. Long time no see.”
In a chair at one of the tables, smiling broadly, sat Sheriff John Palmer.