her jaws had come unhinged.
For a moment Jenny couldn’t believe the heads were real. Too much. Too shocking. She thought of expensive, lifelike Halloween masks peering out of the cellophane windows in costume boxes, and she thought of the grisly novelties sold in joke shops—those wax heads with nylon hair and glass eyes, those gruesome things that young boys sometimes found wildly amusing (and surely that’s what these were)—and, crazily, she thought of a line from a TV commercial for cake mixes— Nothin’ says lovin’ like somethin’ from the oven!
Her heart thudded.
She was feverish, dizzy.
On the butcher’s-block counter, the severed hands were still poised on the rolling pin. She half-expected them to skitter suddenly across the counter as if they were two crabs.
Where were the Liebermanns’ decapitated bodies? Stuffed in the big oven, behind steel doors that had no windows? Lying stiff and frosted in the walk-in refrigerator?
Bitterness rose in her throat, but she choked it back.
The pistol now seemed an ineffectual defense against this incredibly violent, unknown enemy.
Again, Jenny had the feeling of being watched, and the drumbeat of her heart was no longer snare but timpani.
She turned to Lisa. “Let’s get out of here.”
The girl headed for the storeroom door.
“Not that way!” Jenny said sharply.
Lisa turned, blinking, confused.
“Not the alley,” Jenny said. “And not that dark passage again.”
“God, no,” Lisa agreed.
They hurried across the kitchen and through the other door, into the sales room. Past the empty pastry cases. Past the cafe tables and chairs.
Jenny had some trouble with the deadbolt lock on the front door. It was stiff. She thought they might have to leave by way of the alley, after all. Then she realized she was trying to turn the thumb-latch the wrong way. Twisted the proper direction, the bolt slipped back with a clack, and Jenny yanked the door open.
They rushed out into the cool, night air.
Lisa crossed the sidewalk to a tall pine tree. She seemed to need to lean against something.
Jenny joined her sister, glancing back apprehensively at the bakery. She wouldn’t have been surprised to see two decapitated bodies shambling toward her with demonic intent. But nothing moved back there except the scalloped edge of the blue-and-white-striped awning, which undulated in the inconstant breeze.
The night remained silent.
The moon had risen somewhat higher in the sky since Jenny and Lisa had entered the covered passageway.
After a while the girl said, “Radiation, disease, poison, toxic gas—boy, we sure were on the wrong track. Only other people, sick people, do that kind of weird stuff. Right? Some weird psycho did all of this.”
Jenny shook her head. “One man can’t have done it all. To overwhelm a town of nearly five hundred people, it would take an army of psychopathic killers.”
“Then that’s what it was,” Lisa said, shivering.
Jenny looked nervously up and down the deserted street. It seemed imprudent, even reckless, to be standing here, in plain sight, but she couldn’t think of anywhere else that would be safer.
She said, “Psychopaths don’t join clubs and plan mass murders as if they were Rotarians planning a charity dance. They almost always act alone.”
Flicking her eyes from shadow to shadow as if she expected one of them to have substance and malevolent intentions, Lisa said, “What about the Charles Manson commune, back in the sixties, those people who killed the movie star—what was her name?”
“Sharon Tate.”
“Yeah. Couldn’t this be a group of nuts like that?”
“At most, there were half a dozen people in the core of the Manson family, and that was a very rare deviation from the lone-wolf pattern. Anyway, half a dozen couldn’t do this to Snowfield. It would take fifty, a hundred, maybe more. That many psychopaths just couldn’t act together.”
They were both silent for a while. Then Jenny said,
Freya Barker
Melody Grace
Elliot Paul
Heidi Rice
Helen Harper
Whisper His Name
Norah-Jean Perkin
Gina Azzi
Paddy Ashdown
Jim Laughter