Darkfall
meat-”
“I’m warning you-”
“-dog meat, garbage-”
“-I’ll find you-”
“-and maybe I’ll even rape the girl-”
“-you stinking scumbag!”
“-‘cause she’s really a tender, juicy little piece. I like them tender sometimes, very young and tender, innocent. The thrill is in the corruption, you see.”
“You threaten my kids, you asshole, you just threw away whatever chance you had. Who do you think you are? My God, where do you think you are? This is America, you dumb shit. You can’t get away with that kind of stuff here, threatening my kids.”
“I’ll give you the rest of the day to think it over. Then, if you don’t back off, I’ll take Davey and Penny. And I’ll make it very painful for them.”
Lavelle hung up.
“Wait!” Jack shouted.
He rattled the disconnect lever, trying to reestablish contact, trying to bring Lavelle back. Of course, it didn’t work.
He was gripping the receiver so hard that his hand ached and his muscles were bunched up all the way to the shoulder. He slammed the receiver down almost hard enough to crack the earpiece.
He was breathing like a bull that, for some time, had been taunted by the movement of a red cape. He was aware of his own pulse throbbing in his temples, and he could feel the heat in his flushed face. The knots in his stomach had drawn painfully tight.
After a moment, he turned away from the phone. He was shaking with rage. He stood in the falling snow, gradually getting a grip on himself.
Everything would be all right. Nothing to worry about. Penny and Davey were safe at school, where there were plenty of people to watch over them. It was a good, reliable school, with first-rate security. And Faye would pick them up at three o’clock and take them to her place; Lavelle couldn’t know about that. If he did decide to hurt the kids this evening, he’d expect to find them at the apartment; when he discovered they weren’t at home, he wouldn’t know where to look for them. In spite of what Carver Hampton had said, Lavelle couldn’t know all and see all. Could he? Of course not. He wasn’t God. He might be a Bocor , a priest with real power, a genuine sorcerer. But he wasn’t God. So the kids would be safe with Faye and Keith. In fact, maybe it would be a good idea for them to stay at the Jamison apartment overnight. Or even for the next few days, until Lavelle was apprehended. Faye and Keith wouldn’t mind; they’d welcome the visit, the opportunity to spoil their only niece and nephew. Might even be wise to keep Penny and Davey out of school until this was all over. And he’d talk to Captain Gresham about getting some protection for them, a uniformed officer to stay in the Jamison apartment when Jack wasn’t able to be there. Not much chance Lavelle would track the kids down. Highly unlikely. But just in case
And if Gresham didn’t take the threat seriously, if he thought an around-the-clock guard was an unjustified use of manpower, then something could be arranged with the guys, the other detectives; they’d help him, just as he’d help them if anything like this ever fell in their direction; each of them would give up a few hours of off-duty time, take a shift at the Jamisons‘; anything for a buddy whose family was marked; it was part of the code. Okay. Fine. Everything would be all right.
The world, which had strangely receded when the telephone had begun to ring, now rushed back. Jack was aware of sound, first: a bleating automobile horn, laughter farther along the street, the clatter-clank of tire chains on the snowy pavement, the howling wind. The buildings crowded in around him. A pedestrian scurried past, bent into the wind; and here came three black teenagers, laughing, throwing snowballs at one another as they ran. The mist was gone, and he didn’t feel dizzy or disoriented any longer. He wondered if there actually had been any mist in the first place, and he decided the eerie fog had existed only in his mind, a figment of his imagination. What must have happened was
he must have had an attack of some kind; yeah, sure, nothing more than that.
But exactly what kind of attack? And why had he been stricken by it? What had brought it on? He wasn’t an epileptic. He didn’t have low blood pressure. No other physical maladies, as far as he was aware. He had never experienced a fainting spell in his life; nothing remotely like that. He was in perfect health. So why?
And how had he known the phone call
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