The Mask
had the girl spell the name.
Then: Where do you live, Linda?
Second Street.
In Harrisburg?
Yes.
Carol asked for the exact address, and the girl responded. It was only a few blocks from the Front Street address that Millicent Parker had provided.
Whats your fathers name, Linda?
Herbert Bektermann.
Whats your mothers name?
That question had the same effect on Linda as it had had on Millie. She rapidly became agitated and began to shout again. The bitch! Oh, God, what she did to me. The slimy, rotten bitch! I hate her. I hate her!
Chilled by the combination of fury and agony in the girls tortured voice, Carol quickly quieted her.
Then: How old are you, Linda?
Tomorrows my birthday.
Carol frowned. Am I talking to Millicent now?
Whos Millicent?
Is this still Linda Im talking to?
Yes.
And your birthday is tomorrow?
Yes.
How old will you be?
I wont make it.
Carol blinked. You mean you wont live to see your birthday?
Thats right.
Is it your sixteenth birthday?
Yes.
Youre fifteen now?
Yes.
Why are you worried about dying?
Because I know I will.
How do you know?
Because I already am.
Youre already dying?
Dead.
Youre already dead?
I will be.
Please be specific. Are you telling me that youre already dead? Or are you saying that youre merely afraid youre going to die sometime soon?
Yes.
Which is it?
Both.
Carol felt as if she were in the middle of a tea party at the Mad Hatters house.
How do you think youre going to die, Linda?
Shell kill me.
Who?
The bitch.
Your mother?
The girl doubled over and clutched at her side, as if she had been struck. She screamed, turned, staggered two steps, and fell with a crash. On the floor she still clutched her side, and she kicked her legs, writhed. She was obviously in unendurable pain. It was only imaginary pain, of course, but to the girl it was indistinguishable from the real thing.
Frightened, Carol knelt beside her, held her hand, and urged her to be calm. When the girl eventually relaxed, Carol quickly brought her all the way back to the present and out of the trance.
Jane blinked, stared up at Carol, and put one hand on the floor beside her, as if testing the truth of what her eyes told her. Wow, what am I doing down here?
Carol helped her to her feet. I suppose you dont remember?
No. Did I tell you anything more about myself?
No. I dont think so. You told me you were a girl named Millicent Parker, and then you told me you were a girl named Linda Bektermann, but obviously you cant be both of them and Laura, too. So I suspect that you arent any of them.
I dont think so, either, Jane said. Those two new names dont mean anything more to me than Laura Havenswood did. But who are those people? Where did I get their names, and why did I tell you I was any of them?
Ill be damned if I know, Carol said. But sooner or later, well figure it out. Well get to the bottom of all this, kiddo. I promise you that.
But what in Gods name will we find at the bottom, down there in the dark? Carol wondered. Will it be something well wish wed left buried forever?
----
Thursday afternoon, Grace Mitowski worked in the rose garden behind her house. The day was warm and clear, and she felt the need for some exercise. Besides, in the garden she wouldnt be able to hear the telephone ringing and wouldnt be tempted to answer it. Which was fine, because she wasnt psychologically prepared to answer the phone just yet; she hadnt decided how to deal with the hoaxer the next time he called and pretended that he was her long-dead husband.
Because of last weeks torrential rains, the roses were past their prime. The last flowers of the season should have been at the peak of their beauty right now, but many of the big blooms had lost a fifth or even a fourth of their petals under the lashing of the wind-whipped rain. Nevertheless, the garden was still a colorful, cheery sight.
She had let Aristophanes out for some exercise.
She kept an eye on him, intending to call him back the moment he headed off the property. She was determined to keep him away from whoever had poisoned or drugged him. But he didnt seem to be in a rambling mood; he stayed nearby, creeping among the roses, stirring up a moth or
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