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The Cellar bhc-1 Page 5


  Jud pointed toward the newspaper clipping. “That says eleven people have died in Beast House.”

  “Its facts are correct, for a change.”

  “That’s a lot of killing.”

  “Indeed.”

  “Somebody should put a stop to it.”

  “I’d kill it myself, if I had the courage. But God, to think of entering that house at night! Never. I could never do it.”

  “Has anybody gone in after it?”

  “At night? Only a fool…”

  “Or a man with a very good reason.”

  “What kind of reason?” Larry asked.

  “Revenge, idealism, money. Has a reward ever been offered?”

  “For killing it? Its existence isn’t even admitted, not by anyone but old Kutch and her crazy son. And they certainly don’t want it harmed. That goddamned beast, and its reputation, is their sole source of income. It’s probably all that keeps the town afloat, for that matter. Beast House is no Hearst Castle or Winchester House, but you’d be surprised how many people will pay four bucks a head for a guided tour of an old place that not only boasts a legendary monster but that also was the scene of eleven brutal murders. They come from all over California, from Oregon, from every state in the union. A family driving through California can’t pass within fifty miles of Malcasa Point without its kids screaming to tour Beast House. Tourist dollars are the lifeblood of the town. If somebody were to kill the beast…”

  “Think of the tourists its carcass would bring,” Jud suggested, grinning.

  “But the mystery would be gone. The beast is the heart of that house. The house would die without it. Malcasa Point would follow close on its heels, and the people don’t want that.”

  “They’d rather have the killing continue?”

  “Certainly. An occasional killing does wonders for business.”

  “If the town is that way, it doesn’t deserve to live.”

  “A perceptive man your father was, naming you Judgment.”

  “You said you would kill the beast yourself, if you could.”

  “If I had the courage, yes.”

  “Have you ever thought of hiring someone to do it for you?”

  “Who could I hire for a job like that?”

  “Depends on what you’re willing to pay.”

  “What’s a good night’s sleep worth, eh?” The grin on his hollow face looked grotesque.

  “You might look upon it as a contribution to humanity,” Jud said.

  “I assume you know someone who might be willing, for a large sum of money, to enter the house at night and dispatch the beast?”

  “I might know someone,” Jud told him.

  “What would it cost?”

  “That depends on the risk involved. He’d have to know a lot more before making a firm commitment.”

  “Can you give me a rough idea?”

  “His minimum would be five thousand.”

  “His maximum?”

  “No maximum.”

  “My funds aren’t bottomless, but I believe I’d be willing to invest a considerable portion of them, if necessary, in a project of that type.”

  “What are you doing tomorrow?”

  “I’m open to suggestions,” Larry said.

  “Why don’t the two of us drive up the coast, bright and early, and pay a visit to Beast House.” 5.

  The two cups of coffee didn’t keep Jud awake when he got back to his apartment. He fell asleep at once, and if he dreamed at all, he remembered none of it when the alarm clock blared at 6 A.M. Monday.

  CHAPTER FOUR

  Roy woke up in a king-sized bed. Next to him, face down with her hands tied behind her back, lay the girl Joni. She was naked. A short length of clothesline led from her wrists to Roy’s right hand. He untied his hand, then both of hers.

  He rolled Joni onto her back. Her eyes were open. She looked up at him, through him, past him. Almost as if she were blind.

  “Sleep well?” he asked.

  She didn’t seem to hear.

  He placed a hand on her chest, feeling the steady beat of her heart, and the rise and fall of her breathing.

  “Where’s your spirit?” he asked, and laughed.

  She didn’t blink or move. Not when he pinched her. Not when he stroked her body, or sucked it, or bit it. Not when he entered her. Not when he shuddered with an orgasm. Not when he pulled out and got off the bed.

  He tied her again, anyway.

  He dressed in the father’s clothes. He made coffee. While it percolated, he prepared six slices of bacon, three eggs over easy, and two pieces of toast. He carried them into the living room and turned on the television.

  The phone rang. He picked it up.

  “Hello?” he asked.

  “Hello?” The woman’s voice sounded confused. “May I speak to Marv, please?”

  “He isn’t here. Can I take a message?”

  “This is Esther. His secretary?”

  “Oh. You must be wondering why he didn’t show up at work.”

  “He didn’t even call in.”

  “Oh, well, no. He had a heart attack last night. Early this morning, actually.”

  “No!”

  “I’m afraid so. Last I saw, they were loading him into an ambulance.”

  “Is he…is he alive?”

  “Last I heard. I’m staying with Joni. You know, baby-sitting. I haven’t heard a thing since they left.”

  “What hospital was he taken to, do you know?”

  “Let me think. Gee, you know, I’m not really sure. Everything was so confused.”

  “Could you let us know when you hear any word of his condition?”

  “I’d be glad to.”

  She gave him the office telephone number. He didn’t copy it. “I’ll be sure to get back to you,” he said, “the minute I get any news.”

  “Thank you so much.”

  “You’re welcome.”

  He hung up, went back to the couch, and began to eat. His breakfast was still warm.

  When he finished it, he searched for the telephone book. He found it in a kitchen drawer under a wall extension. He poured himself another cup of coffee and returned to the living room.

  First, he looked up Hayes. No Hayes, Donna. Only the Hayes, D. that he had checked last night. It had been her apartment, no question about that. He’d recognized some of the furniture.

  He wondered if she still worked for that travel agency. What was its name? Had a catchy slogan. “Let Gold be your guide? Not gold, Gould. Gould Travel. He thumbed through the white pages, found it, and dialed.

  “Gould Travel Service, Miss Winnow.”

  “I’d like to speak to Mrs. Hayes, please.”

  “Hayes?”

  “Donna Hayes.”

  “We have no Donna Hayes at this number. This is Gould Travel Service.”

  “She works there, or she did.”

  “Just a moment, please.” He waited for almost a minute. “Sir, Donna Hayes left our employ several years ago.”

  “Do you know where she went?”

  “I’m afraid not. May I be of service to you? Were you thinking of a cruise, perhaps? We have some marvelous cruises…”

  “No thank you.” He hung up.

  He looked up Blix, John. Donna’s father. Her parents would know where she’d gone, for sure. He copied the address and phone number.

  Shit, he didn’t want to see them. They were the last people he wanted to see.

  What about Karen? He grinned. He wouldn’t mind seeing Karen, at all. In fact, he wouldn’t mind seeing a lot of her. Maybe she’d know where to find those two bitches.

  Worth a try.

  Even if she didn’t know, a visit could still turn out worthwhile. He’d always liked the looks of her.

  What was the name of that guy she’d married? Bob something. Something like a candy bar. Milky Way? No. Mars Bar. Bob Mars Bar. Marston.

  He looked up Marston, found a Robert, and copied the address and telephone num
ber.

  He’d pay them a nice visit. Not now. He didn’t want to leave quite yet. What was the hurry? He might as well stick around for a while, enjoy himself.

  He went into the bedroom. “Hi there, Joni. What you been up to?”

  She stared at the ceiling.

  CHAPTER FIVE 1.

  Sunlight and screeching seagulls woke Donna. She tried to fall asleep again, but the narrow bed, swaybacked with age, made it impossible. She got up and stretched her stiff muscles.

  Sandy was still asleep on the other bed.

  Quietly, Donna crossed the cool wood floor to the front window. She raised the blind and looked out. Across the courtyard, a man weighted down with suitcases was leaving a small, green-painted cabin. A woman and a matching pair of children waited for him inside a station wagon. Half the cabins of the Welcome Inn had either a car or a camper parked in front. Somewhere nearby, a dog barked. She pulled the blind.

  Then she looked for the telephone. The room didn’t have one.

  While she was dressing, Sandy woke up.

  “Morning, honey. Did you sleep well?”

  “Fine. Where are you going?”

  “I want to find a telephone and call Aunt Karen.” She tied her sneakers. “I don’t want her worrying about us.”

  “Can I come?”

  “You can stay here and get dressed. I’ll only be a minute, then we’ll go get some breakfast.”

  “Okay.”

  She buttoned her plaid cotton blouse and picked up her handbag. “Don’t open the door for anyone, right?”

  “Right,” the girl said.

  Outside, the morning air was fresh with the scent of pine, a smell that reminded her of warm, shadowed trails in the Sierra where she used to backpack with her sister. Before Roy. The way Roy acted in the mountains, she quickly lost the taste for the wilderness. Once she was rid of him, she should have taken up backpacking again. Maybe soon…

  She climbed steps to the porch of the motel office and saw a telephone booth at the far end. She headed for it. The wood groaned under her feet, sounding like the weathered planking of an aged pier.

  She stepped into the booth, dropped coins into the telephone slot, and dialed Operator. She charged the call to her home phone. The call went through.

  “Hello?”

  “Morning, Karen.”

  “Uh-oh.”

  “Is that any kind of greeting?”

  “Don’t tell me, your car broke down.”

  “You’re clairvoyant.”

  “Do you need a lift?”

  “No, I’m afraid I’ll have to beg off, for today.”

  “Poor loser.”

  “It’s not that.”

  “They changed your days off? And we were having such good times on Mondays. What’ve you got now, Friday-Saturday, Tuesday-Wednesday?”

  “Your clairvoyance has slipped.”

  “Oh?”

  “I’m calling from the glamorous resort town of Malcasa Point, home of the infamous Beast House.”

  “Are you crocked?”

  “Sober, unfortunately. As near as I can figure, we’re about a hundred miles north of San Francisco. Give or take fifty.”

  “Christ almighty, don’t you know?”

  “Not exactly. I’m sure, if I could see a map…”

  “What are you doing way the hell-and-gone up there, anyway?” Before Donna could answer, Karen said, “Oh God, is he out?”

  “He’s out.”

  “Oh my God.”

  “We thought we’d better make ourselves scarce.”

  “Right. What do you want me to do?”

  “Let Mom and Dad know we’re okay.”

  “What about your apartment?”

  “Can you have our stuff put into storage?”

  “Sure, I guess.”

  “Call Beacon, or someone. Let me know what it comes to, and I’ll send you a check.”

  “How am I gonna let you know anything?”

  “I’ll keep in touch.”

  “Are you ever coming back?”

  “I don’t know.”

  “How could they let him out? How could they?”

  “I guess he behaved himself.”

  “Christ!”

  “It’ll be all right, Karen.”

  “When am I gonna see you again?” She sounded close to tears.

  “This’ll blow over.”

  “Sure it will. If Roy happens to drop dead of a coronary, or drives into a bridge abutment, or…” A sob broke her voice. “Christ, this sort of thing…how can they let it happen?”

  “Hey, don’t cry. Everything’ll be fine. Just tell Mom and Dad we’re okay, and we’ll be in touch.”

  “Okay. And I’ll…take care of your apartment.”

  “Take care of yourself, while you’re at it.”

  “Sure. You too. Tell Sandy hi for me.”

  “I will. Good-bye, Karen.”

  “Bye.”

  Donna hung up. She breathed deeply, fighting for control of her own shaken emotions. Then she crossed the porch. As she started to climb down, she heard the squeak of an opening door.

  “Lady?”

  She looked around at a teenage girl standing in the office doorway. Probably the owner’s daughter. “Yes?”

  “Are you the lady with the car trouble?”

  Donna nodded.

  “Bix from the Chevron called. Him and Kutch went after it. Bix said he’d see you when he gets back.”

  “They don’t have the keys.”

  “Bix doesn’t need ’em.”

  “Did he want me to do anything?”

  The girl shrugged one shoulder. It was bare except for the strap of her tank top. She was obviously wearing no bra, her nipples pressing dark and turgid against the thin fabric. Donna wondered why the girl’s parents allowed her to dress that way.

  “Okay. Thanks for the message.”

  “Any time.”

  The girl spun away. Her cut-off jeans were slit up the sides, revealing tawny leg almost to the hip.

  The girl’s going to get herself raped, Donna thought. If Sandy ever dressed like that…

  Donna climbed down the porch steps and crossed the parking area to their cabin. She had to wait while Sandy finished in the bathroom.

  “Do you want to eat here at the Inn?” Donna asked. “Or should we try our luck in town?”

  “Let’s go into town,” Sandy said, her voice eager. “I hope they’ve got a Dunkin’ Donuts. I’m dying for a doughnut.”

  “I’m dying for a cup of coffee.”

  “Java Mama.”

  They went outside. Sandy, squinting, opened her denim handbag and took out her sunglasses. Their round lenses were huge on her face. Donna, who rarely wore sunglasses, thought they made her daughter look like a bug—a cute bug, but still a bug. She was careful never to mention the resemblance.

  “What did Aunt Karen say?” Sandy asked.

  “She said to tell you hi.”

  “Were you gonna play tennis today?”

  “Yep.”

  “I bet she was surprised.”

  “She understood.”

  They reached the roadside. Donna pointed to the left. “Town’s that way,” she said. They started toward it. “From the way Aunt Karen sounded, I don’t think she’d ever heard of Malcasa Point. It is a beautiful place, though, isn’t it?”

  Sandy nodded. Her sunglasses slipped down her nose. With a forefinger, she poked them into place. “It’s pretty around here, but…”

  “What?”

  “Oh, nothing.”

  “No, tell me. Come on.”

  “How come you told Aunt Karen?”

  “Told her what?”

  “Where we are.”

  “I thought she ought to know.”

  “Oh.” Sandy nodded, and adjusted her glasses.

  “Why?”

  “Do you think it was a good idea, telling her? I

  mean, now she knows where we are.”

  “She won’t
tell anyone.”

  “Not unless he makes her.”

  They stepped off the roadside and waited on the rutted shoulder until an approaching car whooshed by.

  “What do you mean, ‘makes her’?” Donna asked.

  “Makes her tell. Like he used to make you tell things.”

  Donna walked in silence, no longer enjoying the cool, piny air. She imagined her sister stretched naked on a bed, tied firm, Roy beside her using a cigarette lighter to heat the shaft of a screwdriver.

  “You never saw what he did to me, did you? He always locked the door.”

  “Oh I never saw that. Not what he did in the bedroom. Just when he hit you. What did he do in the bedroom?”

  “He hurt me.”

  “It must’ve been awful.”

  “Yeah.”

  “How did he hurt you?”

  “Lots of ways.”

  “I bet he does that to Aunt Karen.”

  “He wouldn’t dare,” Donna said. “He wouldn’t dare.”

  “When can we leave here?” the girl asked nervously.

  “As soon as the car’s ready.”

  “When’ll that be?”

  “I don’t know. Axel went out there this morning with a man from the service station. If it doesn’t need repairs, we can go as soon as they get here with it.”

  “We’d better,” Sandy said. “We’d better get out of here fast.” 2.

  They chose to eat breakfast at Sarah’s Diner across from the Chevron station. After seeing the selection of doughnuts displayed on a counter-top cake stand, Sandy decided against them. She ordered bacon and eggs, instead.

  “This place is gross,” she said.

  “We won’t eat here from now on.”

  “Ha ha.”

  Sandy put a hand underneath the table, and crinkled her nose with disgust. “There’s gum under the table.”

  “There’s always gum under tables. Some of us have sense enough to keep our hands off it.”

  Sandy sniffed her fingers. “Gross.”

  “Why don’t you go wash your hands?”

  “I bet the john is really the pits,” she said, and got up from the table as if eager to verify her theory.

  Smiling, Donna watched her step smartly toward the far end of the diner. The waitress came and filled Donna’s heavy, chipped cup with coffee.

  “Thank you.”

  “Welcome, sweetie.”

  She watched the waitress head for another table. Then the opening door caught her eyes.