Hallock wished he could confide in Charlie but felt it would be easier on him not to know. "Just can't say."
"You think Maguire's guilty?"
"No. Listen, Charlie, I gotta go. Thanks for the tip about Annie Winters.
"No sweat, Chief." Copin opened the car door. The rain roared. He started to get out, then looked back at Hallock. "I gotta tell you, Chief, the guys all miss you. That Schufeldt is one dumb pecker- head."
Hallock smiled. "Thanks, Charlie."
Copin gave him a three-fingered salute.
When the door was shut, Hallock started the motor. It was clear Griffing didn't have Annie an hour ago, but that didn't mean he wasn't the killer. And it didn't mean he didn't have her now. He wanted to talk to Griffing, find out how his mother died. He would go to the hospital first, then try his house. If Griffing wasn't either place, that would be the time to worry about Annie.
– -
She felt as if she were choking. The gag, a piece of dirty sheet, was between her lips, tied at the back of her head. Annie willed herself to think of something else, anything but the gag.
Mark. Oh, why hadn't she trusted him? Okay, he was wrong about Colin, but he wasn't there to hurt her. Mark had been such a good friend, always there when she needed support, love. How could she have thought he was a killer? And her fleeting doubts about Colin. It was her basic distrust of people, Bob dying, leaving her alone. But that was over now. She had herself, and if she got out of this she was going to love again, take the risk. She simply couldn't go on the way she had. Look where mistrust had gotten her. Oh, funny, Annie, really funny! She couldn't look: Another piece of sheet covered her eyes.
He'd taken over the wheel after ordering her to pull into Stuart Lane. The first thing he'd done was to tell her to move to the passenger side, then he carefully climbed over the seat and slipped in behind the wheel. It was then that he'd pulled out the two pieces of dirty sheet, one for the gag, the other to blindfold her. Then he'd bound her wrists with rope.
For a moment she'd considered leaping from the car. But even if she'd managed to get the door handle open, jump, what good would it do her? He'd stop the car and drag her back; she was helpless with no hands, no vision.
They'd driven for about ten minutes and then stopped. She'd heard him get out. Then her door was opened. She'd felt his hand on her arm, heard him ordering her to get out. Rain slashed at her face. He'd told her to hurry, and guided her across the gravel driveway. She'd stumbled several times, her ankle growing more painful every moment. "We're going up some steps," he'd said.
She'd figured it was his place; she'd been there two or three times. The climb had tortured her, the ankle feeling as though it would crack. He'd opened a door, the hinges squealing, then closed it behind them. They moved along a wooden floor. Another door opened and he'd shoved her inside. Untying her wrists, he'd roughly pushed her into a chair and tied her hands behind her. Then he'd left, shutting the door.
Now she tried to move her wrists, but with each movement the rope tightened, scraping her skin. She was unable to free herself. The only possible chance she had was if he untied her. She couldn't believe that this was the way her life would end. If only he'd take the gag from her mouth so she could talk to him, she might persuade him to let her go. But that was arrogant, she thought. None of the others had succeeded; why should she?
No, this was how it was going to end. But why? What had he meant when he'd said Razzamatazz? Did he mean the club her father had played in all those years ago? Funny, she and Colin had just been talking about it.
A blast of rock music cut off her thoughts. The door opened and closed. His footsteps approached. Annie began to pray.
– -
It was hell waiting. What was taking Hallock so long? Jesus, what if Schufeldt arrested him for something? He wouldn't put it past that guy. Colin slapped his pockets looking for a cigarette he might have missed. Nothing.
If he thought he could get to his car without being seen, he'd try it. But then what? He hadn't the slightest idea where to look for Annie. Still, driving around would feel better than sitting here, helpless. Driving around. He thought about what was ahead, going in the car with Hallock. He mustn't start the fears now. What had Dr. Safier told him? Put yourself in a safe place, create an atmosphere in your mind, stay there. Colin's place was a darkened movie theater, his chair soft luxurious leather. While they drove he'd tell Hallock not to talk to him. He'd keep the panic down by going to his theater.
But that wasn't going to help him now. He paced the dark room, listening to the rain. If Hallock didn't come back in fifteen minutes he'd leave him a note and make a try for his car. He had to do something. The one thing he couldn't be was helpless. If Annie died because he hadn't given it his all, he didn't think he'd survive. He knew he wouldn't.
Hallock walked into the emergency room. A nurse was wheeling an old man down the corridor. "Excuse me, miss." When she looked up at him, Hallock saw that it was Mary Lee Larson, his neighbor. He asked about Griffing.
Mary Lee said, "He left about fifteen minutes ago."
"You know if he was driving?"
"I wouldn't know… no, wait a minute. Doctor asked him if he wanted someone to call his wife to pick him up and he said he had his car."
"Was he going home?"
She shrugged. "I don't think he was going out dancing. He had to have eight stitches and his cheek was burned, too. Somebody was sure mad at him."
He thanked her and ran back to his car. It took him four minutes to get to the Griffing house. There were lights on but no sign of Griffing's car. He rang the bell. Sarah came to the door. She looked odd, as though she knew something she shouldn't.
"Sorry to just drop by this way, Sarah, but I need to speak to Mark."
"He's not home," she said crisply. "Anything I can do?"
"No, 'fraid not. Know where he is?" He hated asking her, putting her on the spot. She seemed so frail.
"I don't. Sorry." She forced a smile. "He didn't come home from the paper. Have you tried there?"
"I'll go there next," he said truthfully.
"If you see him, Waldo, tell him it might be nice to call his wife." Her mouth turned down in bitterness. "No. Don't. I'm sorry, I shouldn't have said that."
He wanted to reach out, give her a hug, tell her it was going to be okay. But he, of all people, couldn't reassure her. He was trying to pin five murders on her husband. "You all right, Sarah?"
"I'm fine. Just tired."
He nodded as if to say he knew that kind of tiredness. "Well, thanks." He started to go back down the steps when she called to him.
"Please, don't… don't say anything to anyone, will you, Waldo?"
"Don't worry," he assured her.
"Sometimes being the wife of a newspaper publisher gets lonely. He's so busy, has so many commitments. You can't blame him for forgetting to call his wife to say he'll be late. I mean, when you think of what he has on his mind-"
"Sure, I understand," he said, cutting her off. He wanted her to stop justifying Griffing to him; it was none of his business and it was humiliating for her. "Take care, Sarah." He started toward the car, then stopped. Why not ask her? Turning back to her he saw she was still watching him, standing in the doorway, a waiflike figure. "I wonder if you could tell me something."
"Depends what it is."
He nodded. "Mark's mother. She died a long time ago, right?"
"Yes."
"Do you know how she died?"
"Cancer," she said. "His mother died of cancer when he was ten. Why?"
Hallock felt stunned. "Oh, just something I needed to clear up in my mind." It made no sense but he wasn't going to explain it now.
Sarah didn't pursue it, just said goodnight and closed the door.
As he drove to the motel to pick up Maguire, he experienced a sense of dread, of impending doom. Something he hadn't considered was a definite possibility: Griffing wasn't the killer after all. And Annie Winters was missing. He didn't need to go back to second- grade math to figure this one out: One and one made two. The Razzamatazz killer was somebody else. And he didn't have a clue who it was.