Stealing Faces - Michael Prescott [78]
“Kill her. Break her neck.”
Stop saying that! she wanted to shout. Just shut up and stop saying it and go away!
He was in the bathroom with her, no expression on his face, no light in his eyes, a huge man who was an automaton in the grip of a trance, and he swiped at her, clutching at her hair, loose strands whisking through his fingers as she spun away from him, trying to maneuver in the tight confines of the room.
Flash of action, his left arm streaking toward her face. She whipped sideways, the blow connecting only with the mirror above the sink, silvered glass fracturing, and she had time to think I’m okay before pain walloped her hard on the back of her head—his right hand, delivering a palm heel strike—and in a plunge of dizziness she staggered through the doorway and collapsed on the floor between the bed and the TV stand.
She was aware of numbness alternating with jolts of pain, and of the feeble clawing movements of her hands on the short-nap carpet, and of bubbles of nausea popping in her throat and leaving a sour taste.
Aware of all this, but not really, because there was no person to register these separate facts. There was no Elizabeth or Kaylie or whoever she thought she was. There was only pain and desperation and then, strangely, one lucid thought.
This is what Cray does to them.
To his victims. That was what she meant.
He’d told her how he liked to strip them to their essence. She hadn’t understood. She did now.
Then the pain was gone, replaced by a cold anger that cleared her mind.
She wouldn’t let him win. Had to get up, run, run now.
But her body wouldn’t obey. Her arms and legs trembled with weakness. She could not find the strength to stand.
Blinking, she turned her head. Walter was still in the bathroom, wrapping his left arm in a small hand towel. He’d cut himself on the mirror’s shards.
He tied the towel in place, then looked benignly at her. He seemed to be in no particular hurry, and of course he wasn’t, because he was a schizophrenic and time did not exist for him.
“Kill her,” he said, as if reminding himself. “Break her neck.”
She was getting tired of hearing that.
* * *
“You remember her?” Shepherd said, keeping his voice calm.
The manager shrugged. “Sure do. Maybe nine-thirty, she comes sashaying in here, asking for a room. So I think she’s a hooker, right? And I don’t want hookers. My husband and me, we run this place, and it’s not the Hilton, I grant you, but it’s respectable.”
“Did you give her a room or not?”
“Room thirty-seven. Left side of the building, first floor. Sort of close by, so I could walk past now and again and check on it. Any noise, any funny business, and she’d be out of here. But it’s been quiet all day. What’d she do?”
“Never mind that. I need a spare key.”
“You bust up the place, you pay for it.”
“I’m not going to bust up anything.” Shepherd took his cell phone from his pocket and used the speed dialer to call Alvarez at his desk. As the phone rang at the other end of the line, Shepherd asked, “What name did she register under?”
“No name. No registration. She paid cash up front. That’s another reason I pegged her for a whore. Now, seeing how you’re after her, I’m guessing maybe she’s something a whole lot worse.”
Shepherd heard a click as the phone was picked up, then a snap of chewing gum and a laconic voice saying, “Alvarez.”
“I found her.”
“What took you so long?”
“That’s funny. I need you and a patrol unit right away.”
“I’ll bring Galston and Bane, the ones who I.D.’d her. They’re still here filling out the report. It’ll be a nice little reunion for Miss McMillan, don’t you think?”
Shepherd nodded. “She’ll be thrilled.”
33
Walter came out of the bathroom.
Elizabeth twisted onto her side, making one last effort to stand, knowing it was hopeless.
“Kill