A Maidens Grave
there’s more to you. There is, ain’t there?”
Melanie was horrified to find, somewhere in her heart, a splinter of pleasure. This terrible, terrible man was approving of her. He killed Susan, he killed Susan, he killed Susan, she told herself. He’d kill me in an instant if he wanted to. These things she knew but all she sensed at this moment was his approval.
He put the gun away and fiddled with his shoelaces. “You think I’m bad for . . . to your friend. Well, by your thinkin’ I am bad. I ain’t . . . smart and I don’t have no particular talents. But the one thing I am is bad. I’m not saying I don’t have a heart or that I haven’t cried in my day. I cried for a week when somebody shot my brother. Yes, I did.” Brutus paused, his pointy teeth rising from his thin lips, “Now, that sonofabitch out there . . .” He nodded toward the phone.
De l’Epée? Does he mean de l’Epée?
“Him and me, we’re in a battle right now. And he’s going to lose . . . . Why? Because bad is simple and good is complicated. And the simple always wins. That’s what everything comes down to in the end. Simple always wins. That’s just nature and you know what kind of trouble people get into ignoring nature. Look at you, all you deaf people. You’ll die out before people like me. I need something, I can say, ‘Give it to me.’ I open my mouth and somebody does what I want. But you, you have to do funny things with your hands. You have to write it down. That’s complicated. You’re a freak . . . you’ll die and I’ll live. It’s nature.
“Me, I’m taking that girl over there, that flower-dress one, and shooting her in about ten minutes if . . . helicopter don’t get here. Which I don’t think it will. To me,that’s no worse’n scratching an itch or buying a soda pop when you’re thirsty.”
He looked at Emily, his mouth curling into that faint smile of his.
And in his glance, Melanie suddenly saw much more than a look of a captor toward his victim. She saw all the taunts of her classmates, the grinding frustrations of trying to understand what can be understood only by the miracle of hearing. She saw an empty life without a lover. She saw the cover of a piece of sheet music entitled “Amazing Grace” and inside, merely blank pages.
God’s will . . .
Brutus’s glance . . .
And so it made sense that she went for his eyes.
Melanie leapt forward, her perfect fingernails clawing at his face.
He gave a gasp of surprise and stumbled backwards, groping for his gun. He pulled it from his belt and she lunged for it. The pistol flew from his grip and slid across the floor. She was out of control, crazed, driven by a consuming anger unlike any she’d ever experienced. An anger that poured from her too quickly, ripping her open, hurting the way the fever had burned her skin when she was eight and took away the simple and made her life so terribly complicated.
Her long fingers, muscular from years of signing, tipped with pearl nails, ripped into his cheek; she slapped his nose, she dug for his eyes. As he fell onto his back she leapt upon his chest, her knee crunching into his solar plexus. He gasped as the breath was forced from his lungs. He struck her once in the chest and she recoiled from him but he had no leverage and his blow was painless.
“Jesus Christ . . .!” His wiry hands reached for her throat but she punched them aside and got a grip on his windpipe, her strong arms fending off his; he couldn’t quite reach her. Where was this strength coming from? she wondered, as she banged his head into the concrete and watched his face turn blue.
Perhaps Stoat and Bear were running toward her, perhaps they were aiming their guns at her. Or maybebecause Brutus had no air in his lungs he was silent, maybe he was too proud to call for help. She didn’t know—or care. Nothing existed for her but this man and his evilness—not the other girls, not Mrs. Harstrawn, not the soul of Susan Phillips, who agnostic Melanie believed floated above them at this moment, a beautiful seraph.
She was going to kill him.
Then suddenly he went limp as a towel. His tongue protruded from his pale lips. And she thought, My God, I’ve done it! Exultant and terrified, she sat back, looking at the twins, sobbing Emily, gasping Bev.
When his knee rose fast she had no time to deflect it and it caught her between the legs, crashing into her with a raging pain. She inhaled fiercely and
Weitere Kostenlose Bücher