Maybe this isn’t such a great idea, he thought.
But he was so close.
Still, to enter a building where he didn’t belong…
This might very well be where the bleeder lived. Why had she entered from the alley, though, instead of using the front? Did she feel that she had to sneak in?
‘Strange,’ Byron muttered.
Maybe she simply wandered down the alley, lost and dazed, and entered this door in the hope of finding someone who would help her. Even now, she might be staggering down a hallway, too weak to call out.
Byron plucked a neatly folded handkerchief from his pocket, shook it open, and spread it over his left hand. He turned the knob.
With a quiet snick, the latch tongue retracted.
He eased the door open.
The beam of his flashlight probed the darkness of a narrow corridor. On the hardwood floor gleamed a dot of blood.
He stepped inside. The hot air smelled stale and musty. Pulling the door shut, he listened. Except for the pounding of his own heartbeat, he heard nothing.
His own apartment building, even at this hour, was nearly always filled with sounds: people arguing or laughing, doors slamming, voices from radios and televisions.
His building had lighted hallways.
Hallways that always smelled of food, often of liquor. Now and again, they were sweet with the lingering aromas of cheap perfume.
Nobody lives here, he suddenly thought.
He didn’t like that. Not at all.
He realized that he was holding his breath as he started forward. He walked slowly, setting each heel down and rolling the shoe forward to its toe. Sometimes, a board creaked under him.
He stopped at a corner where this bit of hallway met a long stretch of corridor. Leaning forward, he aimed his beam to the left. He saw no blood on the floor. His light reached only far enough down the narrow passage to reveal one door. That door stood open.
He knew that he should take a peek inside.
He didn’t want to.
Byron looked to the right. Not far away, a staircase rose toward the upper stories. Beyond that was a foyer and the front entrance.
He saw no blood on the floor in that direction.
I’ll check that way, first, he decided. He knew it would make more sense to go left, but heading toward the front seemed safer.
He turned the corner. After a few strides, he twisted around and checked behind him with the light. That long hallway made him very nervous. Especially the open door, though he couldn’t see it from here. Instead of turning his back on it, he began sidestepping.
He shined his light up and down the stairway. The balustrade flung crooked, shifting bars of shadow against the wall.
What if the blood goes up there?
He didn’t want to think about that.
He checked the floor ahead of him. Still, no blood. Coming to the foot of the stairs, he checked the newel cap and ran his light up the banister. No blood. Nor did he find any on the lower stairs. He could only see the tops of five, though. After that, they were above his eye level.
I don’t want to go up there, he thought.
He wanted to go up there even less than he wanted to search the far end of the hallway.
Sidestepping through the foyer, he made his way to the front door. He tried its handle. The door seemed frozen in place.
He noticed that his light was shining on a panel of mailboxes. His own building had a similar arrangement. But in his building, each box was labeled with a room number and name. No such labels here.
This came as no surprise to Byron. But his dread deepened.
I’ve come this far, he told himself. I’m not going to back out now.
Trembling, he stepped toward the stairway. He climbed one stair, then another. The muscles of his legs felt like warm jelly. He stopped. He swept his light across two higher treads that he hadn’t been able to see from the bottom. Still, no blood.
She didn’t go this way, he told himself.
If she did, she’s on her own.
I didn’t count on having to search an abandoned apartment house. That’d be stupid. God only knows who might be lurking in the empty rooms.
Byron backed down the stairs and hurried away, eager to reach the passage that would lead to the alley door.
He felt ashamed of himself for giving up.
Nobody will ever know.
But he hesitated when he came to the connecting hallway. He shone his light at the alley door. Twenty feet away. No more than that. He could be outside in seconds.
But what about the bleeder?
You’ll never know, he thought.
You’ll always wonder.
Suppose it is a beautiful young woman, wandering around in shock, slowly bleeding to death? Suppose you’re her only chance?
I don’t care. I’m not going upstairs.
But what about that open door?
He could take a look in there, couldn’t he?
He swung his light toward it.
And heard the soft murmur of a sigh.
Oh my God!
He gazed at the doorway. The sigh had come from there, he was sure of it.
‘Hello?’ he called.
Someone moaned.
Byron glanced again at the alley door, shook his head, and hurried down the corridor.
So much for chickening out, he thought, feeling somewhat pleased with himself in spite of his misgivings.
I’ll be a hero, after all.
‘I’m here,’ he said as he neared the open door. ‘I’ll help you.’
He rushed into the room.
He jumped the beam of his flashlight here and there. Shot its bright tunnel into corners of the room. Across bare floorboards. Past windows and a radiator.
At his back, the door slammed shut.
He gasped and whirled around.
And stared, not quite sure what he was seeing.
Then a small whimper slipped from his throat and he stumbled backward, urine running hot down his leg.
The man standing beside the door grinned with wet, red lips. He was hairless. He didn’t even have eyebrows. Nor did he appear to have a neck. His head looked as if it had been jammed down between his massive shoulders.
His bloody lips grinned at Byron around a clear plastic tube.
A straw of sorts. Flecked inside with red.
The tube curled down from his mouth to a body cradled in his thick arms.
The limp body of a young man whose head was tipped back as if he found something fascinating about the far wall. He wore jeans and a plaid shirt. The shirt hung open. From the center of his chest protruded something that resembled a metal spike - obviously hollow inside - which was joined with the plastic tubing. A single thin streamer of blood stretched from the hole, across his chest, and down the side of his ribcage.
It was the streamer, Byron knew, that had left the trail of drops which led him there.
He pictured the monstrous, bloated man carrying the body block after block down city streets, drinking its blood as he lumbered along.
Now, the awful man shook the body. His cheeks sank in as he sucked. Some red flew up through the tubing. Byron heard a slurpy hollow sound - the sound that comes from a straw when you reach the bottom of a chocolate shake.
Then came another soft sigh.
‘All gone,’ the man muttered.