Cray had taken it.
He’d left the gun, because an unsilenced firearm was useless to him on the institute’s grounds. But the knife he had carried with him when he left the house.
He needed it. He was hunting her.
Shepherd had turned to climb the stairs when Collins appeared in the doorway. “I talked to him. You didn’t tell me I was calling the goddamned undersheriff. This better be—”
Then he saw the things in the cellar, and he blinked.
“They’re not real,” he whispered, “are they?”
“Cray’s been busy.” Shepherd reached the top of the stairs. “He still is.”
He guided Collins away from the cellar door and shook him gently to get his attention. “Here’s what you need to do now,” Shepherd said. “Find your boss, the chief security officer. What’s his name?”
He didn’t care about the man’s name. He just wanted the kid to start thinking again, to unfreeze his mind.
“Blysdale,” Collins said after a moment.
“Good, Blysdale. Track him down. Tell him what’s going on.”
“I can hail him on the radio.”
Shepherd had already thought of this — and had remembered how the satchel Kaylie left for the police had vanished before the squad car got there.
Cray had retrieved it. He could have found it only by monitoring police cross talk, beating the patrol unit to its destination.
“No,” he said, “I don’t want you on the air. Cray may be listening in. We can’t afford to tip him off. Got it?”
“Think so.” Collins nodded, then said more firmly, “Sure I do.”
Shepherd patted his shoulder. “You’ll be fine.”
He moved away, toward the door at the rear of the kitchen, which led outside.
“What about you?” Collins called after him. “What are you going to do?”
Shepherd opened the door on the night, then looked back.
“I’ll find Cray,” he said, “and make up for a bad mistake I made… if I still can.”
56
Ward C, the abandoned ward of the Hawk Ridge Institute, was a one-story building in the shape of an L, with a brick exterior and a flat roof and not a single window, barred or otherwise. Access was afforded by doors on the north and east sides.
When it had been in use, Ward C had been known variously as the barred ward, the violent ward, the forensic ward, the disturbed ward. The hard cases had been interred there. Kaylie McMillan, murderess, had been one of them.
She was here again, not a prisoner now, only a hunted animal, crouching in a tight cluster of fear on the tile floor of the corridor, precisely at the midpoint of the building, the bend in the L.
There was no light in the ward. She hugged herself in the utter dark.
Her garments had been scratched and torn by brambles and cactus spines. She was dirty, rank with sweat. Her hair lay pasted to her scalp in a dense mat. Nausea bubbled in her gut. Her teeth chattered softly, though she was not cold.
Perhaps she had intended to come to this place. Perhaps it had been her plan to hide here. Equally likely, she had come only because she sought shelter, temporary concealment, with no strategy, no longer range in view.
Whatever she had done, she’d had no conscious reason for it. Her last instance of rational planning was the moment when she heard the squeak of rubber-soled shoes in the hallway outside her cell and knew the nurse was coming. Then she slipped her head into the noose she’d so carefully prepared, wedging her hand in also to relieve the deadly pressure on her throat.
Everything that happened since had been instinct, reflex, the blind impulse to survive. No thoughts. No identity. Only terror, panic, the brutal slamming of her heart against her ribs.
She had been a person once. A fugitive concocting aliases. Justin’s widow. Anson’s daughter-in-law. She had been someone real, an individual, all quirks and insecurities and self-doubts and loneliness and proud perseverance and determination.
All of that was gone now, just gone. Where the woman named Kaylie McMillan had been, there was only this dirty, exhausted, tattered, desperate thing, kneeling on cold tiles, hunched with fear, drawing shallow breaths that could not feed her lungs.
The voices, at least, had left her. Confusion and conflict had been banished. She had no alternatives to debate, no decisions to reach. She existed purely in and for the moment, without a yesterday or a tomorrow.
She would stay here, crouched like this, waiting like this, for as long as she had to, an hour or a week or a lifetime. She would never move, ever, until her heart stopped racketing in her chest and she felt safe.
From the end of the corridor, thirty yards from where she knelt, came a rasp of metal.
She looked up, her eyes straining in darkness.
There it was again — the noise — low but audible.
She knew that noise.
A sharper tremor passed through her, and a new squeeze of fear cramped her belly.
Hinges.
The rusty hinges of the exterior door, the north door, the door she’d unlocked with the ring of stolen keys.
Hinges creaking now as that door opened for a second time.
Panic impelled her upright, and she retreated around the bend in the corridor, and then she was running to the door on the east side, the only other exit.
A hard carom off a wall, and with a gasp she came up short against the steel door, yanking furiously at the handle before remembering that all the doors in the hospital wards were locked on both sides, and a key was required to enter or exit.
She had keys, they were in her left hand, and she fumbled with them, jamming one after another into the keyhole until she found the key that fit, then twisting her wrist clockwise.
The bolt, strangely loose, seemed to yield immediately, as if it had never been secured at all.
She tugged the handle again, pulling the door inward. Still it would not open.
Stuck.
Somehow the door was stuck, wouldn’t open, and she was trapped in here, no way out.
Cray stepped out of the night into the north corridor of Ward C, then clicked on his flashlight. The red-filtered beam wavered over the tile floor and concrete walls, reaching halfway down the hall.
She was not within sight. But her tracks were. The prints of muddy shoes, tracing an irregular, panicky path away from the door.
He breathed in, out. There was a calmness in him, the strange calm before the gale.
He had her. She could not escape.
True, she had a passkey that would unlock the east door. But the bolt on that door had been broken years ago, and rather than bothering to replace it, Cray had merely ordered the door padlocked.
Padlocked from outside.
The door could not be opened from within, a fact Kaylie no doubt had discovered by now.
She could double back and run straight into him. Or hide at the farthest end of the east corridor and wait for his arrival.
Or she could scream. Scream for help.
He would like that. He had never heard her scream.
No one would answer her cries, if there were any. Screams were common on the grounds of the institute. The staff had long ago learned to ignore such distractions.
Cray turned and shut the north door behind him, then carefully locked it with his passkey.
Then he pivoted to face the corridor again and advanced, guided by a beam of red, into the beckoning dark.
Kaylie stumbled away from the door that would not open, her hands slapping blindly at the side wall in search of an escape route, finding the door to the last cell in the row, not a good place to hide, but the only place left.