David Morrell - Double Image

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After a harrowing experience in Bosnia, war photographer Mitch Coltrane makes a vow. From now on, he will take only those pictures that celebrate life and document hope instead of despair. Then the horrors of his previous assignment return to threaten him, and Coltrane must seek refuge from the present in the past. Having uncovered an old, uncaptioned photograph of a hauntingly beautiful woman, Coltrane sets out to discover who the woman was, and why her photo was hidden in the vault of a world-famous art photographer. Soon he finds himself hopelessly obsessed with the woman in the photograph and slipping into a maze of deception and treachery. Surrounded by illusions of the past and present, Coltrane now must fight for his life in the world capital of make-believe: a decadent and deadly L.A…

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But not completely. For an instant, while Ilkovic’s left hand was occupied with the revolver, the pressure lessened just enough for Coltrane to manage a gasp of air. It was one of the most purifying sensations he had ever known, erasing the spots in his vision, clearing his thoughts enough for him to remember he had another weapon. As Ilkovic’s left arm snapped back into position around Coltrane’s chest, Coltrane lowered his left hand, fumbled in his jeans pocket, took out McCoy’s knife, used his weakening right hand to open the blade, and mustered his remaining energy to stab the backs of Ilkovic’s interlocked hands again and again. The blade slashed and tore and shredded. Hot liquid spewed over Coltrane’s plunging fist.

Ilkovic screamed. Releasing his grip, he stumbled back, wailing. Coltrane dropped to the mud. Landing on his knees, he gasped to fill his lungs. His crushed ribs didn’t want to respond. He couldn’t inhale fast enough to replenish his strength.

Howling, Ilkovic grasped his mangled hands and cursed. At last, Coltrane was able to see him. But the top of Ilkovic’s face was covered not with a mask, but with a device that resembled the eyes of a giant insect. Night-vision goggles. Ilkovic had been using them to track Coltrane in the gathering gloom. With the hood of his camouflage rain slicker pulled up over his head and with the huge twin lenses of the goggles projecting from beneath the hood’s drooping folds, Ilkovic looked monstrous. Furious, he charged.

Coltrane dove to the side a moment before Ilkovic’s heavy-soled shoe would have collided with his groin. Rolling through the mud, Coltrane tried to keep the knife’s blade away from his own body, the weapon suddenly feeling puny against the massive force raging toward him. Coltrane’s photographs had shown how imposingly solid Ilkovic looked. But in person, he exuded a raw power that was awesome.

As Ilkovic kicked again, Coltrane scrambled to avoid the blow, feeling the rush of Ilkovic’s shoe barely miss him. He almost tripped over the shotgun, grabbed it, spun, and found Ilkovic straightening from where he had picked up McCoy’s revolver.

Coltrane aimed the shotgun and pulled the trigger. Nothing happened.

“You didn’t pump a shell into the chamber, photographer.” Ilkovic aimed toward Coltrane’s left shoulder.

Helpless, Coltrane watched him pull the trigger.

But the revolver was jammed with mud.

Instead of firing, it blew apart.

Ilkovic stood as if paralyzed, staring through his grotesque goggles at his explosion-mangled hand. Mouth stretched open in a silent wail, he looked dumbfounded.

Coltrane moved as deliberately as if he had been adjusting the focus and shutter speed of a camera prior to taking a photograph. He racked a shell into the chamber, checked that the shotgun’s barrel wasn’t clogged, aimed, and blew Ilkovic’s head off.

SEVEN

1

A CHAOS OF EMOTIONS THREATENED TO TEAR COLTRANE APART: relief, horror, triumph, dismay, victory, revulsion. Sinking to his knees, staring down in shock toward the headless torso that had been Ilkovic, he had a terrible sense that the corpse was actually that of his father. But this time, his father hadn’t blown his brains out – Coltrane had done it for him.

“Thank God,” he murmured. Tears mixed with the rain on his cheeks. “Thank God.”

Immediately, fear reinvaded him. He had to get help for McCoy. But with McCoy’s car destroyed, there wasn’t any way to drive back to the Pacific Coast Highway. He would have to do it on foot. Ten miles away along a mud-slogged road. It would take hours. McCoy would bleed to death by then.

Despite his exhaustion, Coltrane struggled to his feet, but no sooner did he start to run toward the storm-obscured hills than he lurched to a halt, a sudden thought seizing him. There was a way to drive for help. He had forgotten there was another vehicle – Ilkovic’s. If he could find where…

Coltrane stared toward the headless corpse. Something rose in his throat as he took one hesitant step after another. Stooping, afraid that Ilkovic’s mangled hands would thrust up and clutch his throat, Coltrane trembled and pulled up Ilkovic’s rain slicker. He had been convinced that the worst was over, that there couldn’t be anything more horrifying than what he had just endured, but now he realized how wrong he had been. Touching Ilkovic’s warm corpse, fumbling in his pants pockets, feeling his spongy flesh beneath his wet garment, Coltrane became so light-headed, his mind reeling, that he feared he was going to pass out. His quivering fingers brushed against a set of keys. He tightened his grip and pulled his hand free, squeezing the keys rigidly in his palm lest he lose them as he slumped onto his hips, fighting not to throw up.

Slowly, he wiped his mouth and straightened. Find the car, he urged himself. Where would Ilkovic have left it? Coltrane had heard McCoy drive into the valley – but he hadn’t heard Ilkovic’s car. Did that mean Ilkovic had left it on the ridge above the valley? The trajectory of his bullets had indicated that at the start he was shooting from up there. Had he abandoned his vehicle and come down on foot?

Go! Coltrane inwardly shouted. You have to get help for McCoy!

Running through the dark rain, doing his best to follow the road, he felt the muddy ground angle upward, his lungs heaving, his legs straining. The effort of his ordeal had so drained him that he wavered as he reached the top. Where would Ilkovic have left the car? Not on the ridge, not where Coltrane could have seen it from below. Farther beyond the ridge. Near the road. Ilkovic wouldn’t have wanted to get too far from his escape route.

Coltrane slammed into the hood of the vehicle before he saw it. The startling impact shocked him backward, his knees, thighs, and lower abdomen in pain. But he didn’t have time to let his further injuries slow him down. His thoughts were totally on McCoy. Grabbing the driver’s door of what he now recognized was a dark van, he tugged, cursed when the door didn’t budge, fumbled to unlock it, and finally scrambled up behind the steering wheel. It took his shaking right hand three tries to fit the key into the ignition switch. Starting the van, putting it into gear, he warned himself to go slowly. Don’t get stuck in the mud. He put on the headlights and made a slow, gentle turn, praying as he felt the tires slip in the wet earth. But they gained traction, and he exhaled when the van completed its arc. Starting back through the hills toward the Pacific Coast Highway, he pawed at the levers on the steering wheel and found how to activate the windshield wipers. Throughout, he was conscious of a terrible odor, but with so many activities occupying his attention, it was only when he was on his way that the rank stench in the van fully struck him. It reminded him of rotten meat, and he suddenly knew, his soul frozen, that the rear of the van was where Ilkovic had butchered Daniel.

2

POLICE RADIOS SQUAWKED. The headlights of numerous emergency vehicles pierced the night gloom of the valley, their crisscross pattern creating a sense of being in a maze. The storm had diminished to a drizzle, its din no longer muffling the drone of idling police cars. Although Coltrane had warned the state trooper whose cruiser he had nearly run off the highway that the stream would be too high and fast for an ambulance to get across, the officer had radioed for one, regardless. Now its white outline, haloed by the glare of headlights, stayed fifty yards behind McCoy’s gutted car, amid the other emergency vehicles, all of them trying to remain far enough away that they wouldn’t contaminate the crime scene.

On the opposite side of the stream, across which Coltrane had again made his way no matter the risk, a medevac helicopter hovered, its whirling rotors creating a high-pitched whine, its searchlights aimed toward the charred ruins of the western town. Those lights forced Coltrane to shield his eyes as he sat in a puddle among jumbled scorched timbers, cradling McCoy’s listless body where he had pulled it gently from its makeshift hiding place. McCoy’s body was cold; Coltrane wrapped his arms around him, desperate to warm him. “You’re going to be all right. They’re going to take care of you.”

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