Joe Lansdale - Lost Echoes

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Since a mysterious childhood illness, Harry Wilkes has experienced horrific visions. Gruesome scenes emerge to replay themselves before his eyes. Triggered by simple sounds, these visions occur anywhere a tragic event has happened. Now in college, Harry feels haunted and turns to alcohol to dull his visionary senses. One night, he sees a fellow drunk easily best three muggers. In this man, Harry finds not only a friend that will help him kick the booze, but also a sensei who will teach him to master his unusual gift. Soon Harry’s childhood crush, Kayla, comes and asks for help solving her father’s murder. Unsure of how it will affect him, Harry finds the strength to confront the dark secrets of the past, only to unveil the horrors of the present.
From Publishers Weekly
In this superior East Texas crime thriller from Stoker-winner Lansdale (
), Harry Wilkes discovers after a severe childhood ear infection that he has a peculiar "hindsight." Harry can not only see dead people but see and hear violent events as they occurred in the recent or distant past. "It's like I hear and see ghosts in sounds," he tells his father. By the time he's a college student, Harry's psychic abilities have driven him to booze. After meeting alcoholic Tad Peters, a retired martial arts expert, Harry becomes Tad's surrogate son and student. The two forge a pact to sober up together. Their resolve is tested when Harry agrees to help Kayla Jones, an old childhood crush now a cop, solve her father's murder, which her boss, the local police chief, has dismissed as a suicide. Lansdale's down-home prose erupts with explosive twists and razor sharp insights into how "echoes from the original sounds" can never be silenced until action is taken to defeat the fear that created them.
From Booklist
The prolific Lansdale returns, after sojourns in pulp, sf, and horror, to work his peculiar mojo on the supernatural crime thriller. Harry Wilkes has inherited his family's curse of experiencing "dark sounds," full-sensory recordings of traumatic events that can be unleashed by, for example, the banging of a toilet lid upon which a guy once blew his brains out. Booze helps hold the "ghosts in the noise" at bay, but his life as a drunken recluse isn't going well. He gets things under control with the help of an eccentric sensei named Tad, but when a boyhood girlfriend named Kayla comes home to find her father's killer, Harold grits his teeth and journeys into the dark once more. Lansdale's prose finds the perfect pitch between the laid-back cadences of front-porch storytelling and the thriller's demand for growing urgency. He is a bit unreconstructed when it comes to gender relations--or at least the vocabulary to describe them--but he's got both the charisma and the balls to pull it off. Funny and scary, with a barn-burner ending. 

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“I’m a little leery.”

“I can understand. But it’s okay.”

He kissed back. It certainly was okay. He took her in his arms. They kissed deeply.

“I’ve thought about you ever since the day you moved away,” Harry said.

“Except when you were with Talia?”

“I thought about you then too.”

“Bet there were a number of moments you weren’t thinking of me.”

“Got a point. But I didn’t know you were available.”

“Good answer…I’ve thought about you too, Harry. Really. I had all this planned better. But tonight…I’m so sorry.”

“For what?” he said, and kissed her.

They came up for air late midday and ate sandwiches in the nude. It was a short-lived break, and then they were at it again in Kayla’s darkened bedroom, hammering away, making the bedsprings squeak like a wounded mouse.

Once, they looked up to see Winston with his head bent down, staring through the window, trying to figure things out. Kayla got up and closed the curtain, came back to bed.

After a while they lay in the dark, Kayla in Harry’s arms. She said, “I’m getting sore.”

“Me too.”

“Want to quit?”

“Are you kidding?”

“Shall we proceed then?”

“Once more, into the breach.”

She laughed. “That’s one way to put it.”

“Oh, there’s lots of ways to put it.”

The rest of the day went by and the dark room turned darker yet. They dozed off and on, and when they awoke they made love. Harry had never felt like this before. Kayla, though busy about it all, wasn’t as savage as Talia. Talia had been good, no doubt, but it was all pretty much like a game plan brought to fruition, the storming of the beach on D-day, a job well-done. With Kayla it came about naturally. They seemed to know exactly what the other wanted, and neither seemed to be trying to prove anything.

After a time Kayla said. “That one was the best.”

“Frankly, I don’t know I remember it all that well. I feel sort of as if I’m slipping into a coma.”

“Oh, now there’s a compliment for a girl.”

“It’s just all been so good I can’t take any more.”

“That’s better,” Kayla said. “Was it good with Talia?”

“Oh, come on, Kayla. To men, the worst is good.”

“Was she the worst?”

“Yes.” He thought it was the proper lie to tell.

“I can whip her ass, you know.”

“Never doubted it.”

“What say we sleep a little? I have to go back to work later.”

“Sure.”

Kayla set the alarm. While she was stretched out, messing with the clock radio, Harry took a moment to look at her. It was dark, but not so dark he couldn’t make out the long, lean shape of her body, and he enjoyed seeing it.

When the clock was set, she turned back to him and they shifted comfortably together.

“Maybe just one more time,” she said. “Just so we won’t forget how.”

“Oh, shit,” Kayla said.

The radio was playing, and had been for a while. Kayla rolled out of bed, said, “I set it for an hour ago. I’m going to have to quick-shower and go. Sorry, Harry.”

Harry leaned up on one elbow while Kayla darted for the bathroom. A moment later he heard the shower running. He padded a couple of pillows together and sat up in bed with his back against them, savoring the darkness.

After a short time the bathroom door opened and gave the room some light and some steam from the shower. Kayla stood drying herself with a towel, another one turban-wrapped around her head. He watched as she finished drying and pulled on her panties. They were black, and there was very little of them.

It was like watching the Venus de Milo put on her first set of clothes. Not a bad way to spend time.

“Damn,” Kayla said as she danced around the room, one leg in her uniform pants. She finally got settled, pulled the pants on, then her shirt over her bra. She sat on the bed and put on socks and shoes in the light from the bathroom. Harry kissed her neck.

“Don’t do that, or I’m going to be late for work.”

He pulled back.

“Well, you can do it just a little, while I tie my shoes.”

He did.

“Damn, what did I do with my gun? Sorry, got to turn on the overhead.”

She did. Her gun and holster were on a chair. Harry saw a photo on the night table. He had seen it in the dark, but couldn’t make it out, hadn’t been interested. In the overhead light he could see that it was an actual photo of the newspaper picture he had seen when Kayla became a local cop. This was a sharper, cleaner version, and more widely cropped. You could see that there were people to the left and right in the photo. Other cops watching the ceremony.

Harry rolled out of bed quickly, grabbed the photo, and looked at it closely.

“Kayla?”

Kayla looked up from fastening her gun belt.

“This man,” Harry said. “At the corner of the photo here.”

“What?”

“This guy. Who is he?”

Kayla looked. It was a tall, big-bodied, gray-haired man. He looked like the grandpa who would take you to your first movie, maybe buy you a snow cone and slip you dollars. He was staring at the proceedings from the wings, looking very grandfatherly and proud.

“That’s the chief.”

“Chief of police?” Harry said.

“Yeah…What’s with you, Harry?”

“Shit,” Harry said. “That’s the guy. That’s the guy in the garage with your father, and on the hill, one that raped the woman. He was with your father and the guy who fired the gun.”

Kayla sat on the edge of the bed and looked at the photo.

“The chief? He and my dad, they were so close.”

“It’s him, Kayla.”

“He helped me get in the academy.”

“Maybe he felt sorry for what he did.”

“If he did what you said he did, he doesn’t seem like a man who feels real sorry.”

“I have to agree.”

“Jesus. Not the chief. Could you be wrong?”

“For all I know I got a tumor.”

“You don’t have a tumor.”

Kayla sat for a couple of minutes in silence, and Harry didn’t break it. What had been a perfect day now had shit on it.

“All right,” Kayla said. “I’ve got an idea or two. I’m going to do a bit of investigating myself. This couple in the car, for one thing. Going to give a fresh eye to my dad’s murder, knowing what I know now, what you’ve told me. Can you come see me when I get off tomorrow morning?”

“I got school and work. Can you call me midday?”

Kayla nodded, and then she trembled.

“Shit. The chief. He murdered my father. The lying, two-faced son of a bitch.”

“You’re not going to do anything stupid, are you?” Harry said. “I know how hot-tempered you are.”

“I want to shoot him.”

“Your first idea is the best. No one’s going to believe some nut who gets images through sounds, not without evidence. You do the cop work, and I’ll help you any way I can.”

Kayla nodded.

“Promise?” Harry said.

Kayla reached out and took Harry’s hand. “Promise.”

52

When Harry got to the top of the stairs and touched his door, he discovered it was open. Had he left it open? He couldn’t remember. That wasn’t like him, but sometimes, things he had on his mind, the old brain went on vacation.

He entered cautiously, reached for the light, flicked it.

Nothing happened.

Joey. Goddamn it. Joey was supposed to come by, and he had forgotten. It didn’t break his heart that he had, but he did sort of regret standing the dumb shit up. Though, considering what his night had been like, not much.

Then he saw a shadow dangling from the ceiling, from the light fixture. He pushed the door wider so the streetlight entered the room.

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