almost ran you over out there. I canât say I like the idea of you wandering around the neighborhood in a daze every night. And your house . . .â
âWhat about it?â Deke said, glancing around. If he recognized the unusualness of the place, his face did not register it.
âYou got any liquor in the house?â
âYou want a drink, buddy?â
âNo,â David said. There was a credenza against one wall, a few bottles of vodka and bourbon on it. None were open, and he couldnât see any used glasses. âI mean, have you been drinking?â
Deke waved a hand at him. Donât be silly, his expression said. Some of the old Deke was filtering back into his features now. His eyes looked less dead than they had just moments ago.
âWhy donât you get to bed and Iâll lock up on my way out,â David suggested. For some reason, he was growing increasingly uncomfortable about being in Dekeâs house. Coupled with that discomfort was the feeling that he was overlooking something very obviousâand very importantâand that feeling was setting him on edge.
âOkay, boss. Whatever you say.â Deke got up from the armchair in a huffâit seemed to take great effortâand handed David the towel. His rounded gut glistened with rainwater. âI got some long johns around here someplace,â he said, pausing to peer behind the TV.
âYou keep your long johns behind the television?â David said.
Deke stood upright, as if suddenly considering the absurdity of it all. When he turned to look at David, his eyes were unfocused again.
âMaybe I should call for an ambulance,â David suggested.
âDo it and Iâll brain you. Iâm no invalid.â Dekeâs voice had gone deadly serious.
âSomethingâs off with you.â
âWho the hell asked you to come in here, anyway?â There was real malice behind Dekeâs words, enough to make David consider bolting from the house right then and there. It was as if some switch had been flipped, instantly altering Dekeâs personality.
Drugs, David thought . . . although he had never known Deke Carmody to abuse narcotics. Alcohol, maybe, but not drugs. What else could it be?
Deke slammed a palm against the TV and the screen went dead. Then he turned and grinned idiotically at David. The large man opened his mouth, presumably to say something, but nothing came out. Instead, he liberated a fart that sounded like a trumpet blare, sustaining it for a good five seconds.
âJesus Christ,â David said, too stunned to show emotion.
âGo home,â Deke said, turning around. âYou shouldnât be here.â He ambled down the darkened hallway toward his bedroom, his hands dangling limply at his sides, the canvas of his broad, pallid back speckled with pimples and reddish striations. Like a ghost fading into a fog bank, Deke Carmody vanished into the darkness at the far end of the hallway.
David stood there in the living room for perhaps thirty seconds, listening to the grunting sounds of Deke climbing into his bed. Almost instantly the man began snoring.
David went to one of the windows and untied the curtains. They fell away from the pane, only to reveal a series of carpentry nails that had been pounded into the sill. The sight caused a thick lump to form at the back of Davidâs throat. He went to the next window, untied the curtains, and found a similar display of carpentry nails there, too.
Go home. You shouldnât be here.
David returned to the bathroom, hung the towel back on the hook, and was about to turn and leave when he happened to glance down into the toilet. What he saw there caused him to freezeâand not solely in a halt of his movements, but he could literally feel his entire body suddenly grow cold.
The toilet bowl was filled with blood.
Not just a little bit, and not the superficial hue of a flesh wound or a nosebleed diluted in