In the DeShane residence Betty Lawrence kept vigil. Jack had vomited twice, his knees on each side of the toilet bowl, his hands holding tightly to the white rim. He kept drinking. Oblivion was preferable to the ghostly images inside his head.
In Maggie Richler’s house Sam had a bad few minutes when it was obvious he could not perform in bed.
Maggie had thought sexual release would ease his tension. When she could not arouse her lover, she snuggled into the crook of his arm and fell asleep. Sam stared into the bedroom darkness and saw a madman’s face—a face that would not let him sleep.
Eileen McKenna canceled her evening appointment and went to bed by herself with Tobias, the cat, in her arms. She wished she held Jack instead.
And on the southwest side of Houston a man moved restlessly.
He knew it was too soon after the first kill, but he could not help himself. Not that he had not tried to control himself. After the Saturday night drive to Bloomington, he was exhausted and had slept late on Sunday. He was still exhausted, his body sluggish and his thoughts distorted. He felt as bloated and lazy as a dog tick. It was too soon.
So why was he in the unfamiliar section of the city with a keening in his ears and the garrote down his shirtfront? There was no answer.
He wore black. In the moonlight and the reflection of neon lights, he knew the bloodstains could not be detected. Blood in the night was black, its true color. He remembered the child’s blood running over his hands like streams of thick oil. He smiled.
“I’m going to scare the wits out of you tonight after the movie,” Joe Northumberland said to his wife, Sherry. He gave a low guttural growl and leaned close.
“Oh Joe, stop it now. I won’t go if you start that.”
Marjorie Sider smiled over her glass of wine at her friends. It almost made her wish she were married.
“Know what she did after seeing Halloween?” Joe asked.
“You’re poking fun, Joe,” his wife said.
“She slept with the sheet over her head and clutched my arm all night. This is a grown woman?”
“I did no such thing.” Sherry tried to look indignant.
“She did too. She’s a little ‘fraidy cat.”
“Marge, he laughs at me, but it’s his fault I get so scared. On the way home from that movie he started telling me about haunted houses in South Carolina when he was a kid. He knows gobs of ghost stories.”
“What about you?” Joe asked Marjorie. “Are you frightened of the bogeyman too?”
“I never thought about it much,” she admitted. “I haven’t been to a horror show in years. I saw some Vincent Price movies when I was a kid, and that cured me.”
“I’ve seen some of those rerun on TV,” Joe said. “Pretty spooky flicks. That pendulum swinging… that wax museum made of real people…” He finger-walked up his wife’s arm.
Sherry ignored him. “Wait until you see the movie tonight.” She began to clear the dinner table. “It’s about a woman living on a lake alone and this creature comes out of the woods…”
“Don’t tell the whole story, Sherry,” her husband warned.
Marjorie offered to help with the dishes, but Sherry waved her away.
“Take your glass to the living room. I’ll be finished here quick as a flash. We have to make that nine o’clock showing.”
The Cinema II Theater was three blocks from the Northumberland’s apartment and five blocks from Marjorie’s place. The three friends walked the short distance enjoying the mild winter night.
The movie was one of Hollywood’s B-rated attempts at horror fantasy. It was so badly made that every time the creature was shown, it was obviously only a heavyset, hairy man with a large paunch crawling over props on a sound stage. The heroine was half-crazy, as usual, and the entire movie was her fearful childhood memories returning to haunt her.
Marjorie yawned through most of the film. Sherry munched popcorn throughout the splatter scenes. Joe was the one who paid careful attention to the story. He was silent during the entire hour and a half and repeatedly refused the popcorn and candy his wife kept offering him.
When the last scene faded from the screen. Marjorie was more than ready to leave the theater for the fresh night air.
“What did you think, huh?” Sherry asked on the way up the aisle as the lights were raised. “Wasn’t that scary?”
“I guess so. Although I think John Wayne’s old westerns have this kind of thing beat all out.”
“John Wayne!” Joe pretended he was wounded, clutching his chest. “God, John Wayne movies suck humpbacked turtles.This stuff is camp, Marge. You get to use your imagination.”
“It was graphic enough without imaging anything.”
Joe had fallen behind the two women without their noticing. Suddenly he ran to his wife from behind with a grrrr sound. They turned to see him on his toes, his arms spread to grab them. “I’m gonna get you! I’m gonna eat ’em up, eat ’em up,” he said.
Sherry skipped away and giggled. She pointed an accusing finger at her husband. “I’ll sleep under the bed tonight if you don’t quit.”
Joe came down into a flat-footed lope, his brow in knitted thought. “Hey, you know what? I just thought of something really horrible.”
“What?” Sherry took his arm and smiled over at Marjorie.
“We’ve got a real live creature of our own somewhere in this city. That’s freakier than any movie.”
“You mean the headhunter?” Sherry asked. Her smile turned into a grimace.
“The what?” Marjorie was thoroughly confused.
“Didn’t you hear it on the news today?” Joe asked.
“No, I didn’t. What do you mean ‘headhunter’?”
“You mean you haven’t heard about that little boy near the South Loop who was found with his head missing?” Sherry asked.
“Missing?” Marjorie’s voice turned cold. She did not like the turn the conversation had taken.
“Yeah, missing,” Sherry said. “They couldn’t find it.”
Marjorie shivered. Movies were one thing, real atrocities were another.
“There never was anything like it here before,” Sherry continued, mistaking her friend’s silence for interest.
“Can you imagine how nutty the guy must be? Hell, I’m scaring myself again.”
“Sherry calls him the headhunter,” Joe explained. He glanced at Marjorie and smiled. “We shouldn’t be talking about this tonight. ”
“I agree wholeheartedly,” Marjorie said. “You’ll have me hiding under the bed.”
After the good nights and thank yous were said, Marjorie Sider locked her apartment door with a relieved sigh. She slipped off her shoes and padded across the carpet, across the cool kitchen tile, and opened the refrigerator door. Looking at the milk carton, she thought about cholesterol, and chose the quart bottle of orange juice instead. She needed a lift, not clogged arteries.
After draining the glass, she rinsed it out, turned it upside down in the sink dish drainer, and started for the bedroom. The next day was a workday and Sherry was picking her up early. They were both fighting their way up from the secretarial pool, and at Brown and Root Engineering you had to be bright and eager to succeed.
In the bedroom, Marjorie avoided her image in the mirror as she undressed and put on a long pink nylon gown. With a quick motion she set the alarm and moved it closer to her pillow. It was only eleven, not too late to interfere with her upward mobility plans on the job.
Once in bed, with the lights out, Marjorie heard a tick. It was the silly clock on the kitchen stove. Because of some odd mechanical quirk, the tick came at irregular intervals, and it was so loud it carried through the apartment. Tick. Marjorie listened, letting the ticks lull her to sleep. Tick. Five seconds passed. Tick. How many ticks in a minute? She could not count them for that long. But the sound was a presence of sorts. Off center and unpredictable, but a presence nevertheless. It was not unbearable. Tick… tick…