I thought Jenkins had him for sure. Now he’d bash that egghead in, make an omelet, but that’s not what happened. His first swing was reflex. Now he had a few seconds to think about things. Instead of belting Turgeon again, Jenkins patted the space where his arm used to be. Then he checked his work suit as if it had slipped down there somehow, like an errant set of car keys. He was going into shock.
“Snap out of it!” I shouted, but it didn’t help. It also hurt like hell. My tongue was killing me.
Realizing he had a second chance, Turgeon rushed for the clippers. The heads tried to stop him, but they were no more a nuisance than a pile of glaring watermelons.
Stppp , the daddy head said. Stop.
Turgeon kicked it out of the way, bent over, and grabbed the clippers.
Out of nowhere, for no reason I could see, other than the universe hates me, Turgeon decided to look up and stare straight at me. He gave me a wicked, thin-lipped grin that told me I was next.
I jerked at the ropes, bucking so violently my body moved across the dolly until there was nothing under it but air. I hit the concrete sideways, earning a gash on my cheek. I flipped onto my belly, raised myself on my haunches and threw myself, wrists first, on the corner of the dolly, and rubbed my bonds against the wood for all I was worth.
I tried to cut it; I tried to use the edge to pull at the knot. The dolly rolled. I followed until it stopped against the concrete pillar and kept rubbing. A splinter the size of a steak knife stabbed what used to be the meaty part of my right hand, but the rope was giving faster than my body. Soon the knot looked loose enough for me to go at with my teeth. I chomped at it, clenched my teeth, and tried to pull an end free.
At my back, a struggle was going on. I couldn’t make out the details, but it was lasting way too long for Jenkins to be winning. There were thuds, crunches, hisses, and crackles, and then the horrible snapping of those blades. I madly hoped Jenkins had retrieved the clippers and was cutting up Turgeon, but then I realized he couldn’t use them with one arm.
My hands came loose, but I didn’t enjoy the freedom nearly as much I’d expected. Another sound came to my ears, a steady electronic beeping. It was coming from the dolly. After I pulled the remaining ropes off my ankles, I lifted myself up to see what it was.
For the love of . . .
The timer. Somewhere along the line I’d kicked the crate enough to get it ticking. I had no idea how to turn it off and didn’t have time to experiment.
I turned back to the fight, relieved at what I saw. Apparently the choppers had clamped around air. Jenkins didn’t look any worse. He and Turgeon squared off. Turgeon had the clippers open again and out. His good arm poised to strike, Jenkins bobbed back and forth looking for an opening. The heads were trying to squirm under Turgeon’s feet, to trip him. So far, he hadn’t fallen.
A muffled moan took my eyes back to the dolly. Nell. When I tried to stand and step toward her, I crashed to the ground. In my effort to escape, I’d broken my ankle. My left foot twisted sideways, tearing skin and some muscle. Whether Misty, needle and thread, and some superglue could mend it didn’t matter much at the moment. I pulled myself along the dolly’s edge, yanked out Nell’s gag, and untied her ropes.
This wasn’t the time to ask what she was feeling, but those green eyes, glowing in the wispy poisoned mist of the air, told me. She still thought I was crazy.
“Get out,” I told her. My wounded tongue made every word agony. “Bomb’s gonna explode.”
She sat up. “Why are you doing this?”
Now she wanted to chat? “Didn’t you hear? Plastic explosive! Get out!”
She looked at the timer, then back at me. “Why . . . why are you helping me?”
Was it that surprising? “Go!” I said. This time I gave her a shove.
Instead, she came forward, close enough for me to feel her dry breath on my skin.
“Why?” she insisted.
I could’ve said something about how I used to be a cop, and helping people was an old habit. I could’ve explained how Turgeon had killed both my wife and Nell’s husband, and I didn’t want the sick son of a bitch to enjoy any more success. I could have told her that there was something about the way she looked and moved that might have struck me as garish when I was alive, but now tickled some frayed and otherwise desiccated part of my being just enough to almost make me remember . . . something.
But my tongue was killing me, so instead, with her so close, I grabbed her, pressed my lips into hers, and hugged whatever felt like it would fit against my body.
Was it a kiss? It sure as hell reminded me of one.
I felt the pressure, the shape of her mouth. It was hard to tell where I ended and she began. It took my mind off my tongue and my ankle for a bit. I even think I felt my heart beating, but that was probably the beeping timer.
She pulled away. That are-you-nuts? expression glowed on her face like green fire. She wiped her lips with the back of her hand, but she did it slowly, like she was remembering something, too. Then she turned and ran. Her final words echoed in the toxic dust:
“You’re fucking crazy!”
I didn’t disagree, but I had more crazy shit to do. Jenkins and Turgeon were still circling, skirting each other. Each one was afraid to get too close, or to back off. I picked my left leg up. The foot hung in place. As I brought it down, I found I could bounce on it long enough to bring my right foot forward. I limped past the plastic sheet.
Turgeon saw me first. And Jenkins . . . well, for all his physique, he wasn’t much of a fighter. Probably just pumped iron in a gym. When Turgeon looked at me, Jenkins could’ve used the distraction to swat the clippers again. Instead, he looked at me, too.
Turgeon turned back first, and stabbed forward. The clippers didn’t get Jenkins just then, but they made him stumble. He moved his left foot backward so it skimmed the cheek of one of the heads. If he’d had both arms, or even if he’d been used to having one, he might’ve stayed standing. As it was, he twisted the wrong way, looking surprised as he went down.
The dry stub of his shoulder hit the floor first. He was pushing himself up on his remaining arm when Turgeon got the blades around his neck and snapped them shut.
I heard that sound again, like plasterboard buckling, only thicker, deeper, longer. But I was too damaged and too far away to do a damn thing about it.
31
Crunch .
They say the brain protects itself from unpleasant memories by forgetting them. This was a sound that wouldn’t leave easily, no matter how bad your memory.
Crunch .
It was already crawling around between my ears, looking for a spot to lay eggs. I’d forget the texture of Lenore’s skin, the sound of her voice, her eyes, her name, hell, my own name, long before I forgot that sound.
Crunch .
The heads reacted in unison, like a bottle of electric syrup hit them all at once. Did all of them remember the sound? They’d heard it before. In unison, they spoke a single, dry-whispered word: “No.”
Odell Jenkins’s body plopped back down like a piece of luggage dropped by an invisible hand. Turgeon went to his knees, not from exhaustion or horror. He was thrilled, giddy, and eager to grab his prize. He lifted the head by its sandy curls and gave it a great big smile.
Its eyes twirled, then moved in a jerky pattern, right, left, up, down. Finally, they fixed on the decapitated body. No matter what angle Turgeon held the head as he admired it, its eyes remained on the body, as if it realized they used to belong together. The mouth moved, tried to scream, but unlike the others, it hadn’t yet learned how to make any sounds. It just stretched its jaw, going through the motions, acting, in Jonesey’s words, as if .
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