Wade
Wade Sheffield was born in North Dakota
in 1977, the fourth son of a wheat farmer. He was seven years old
before realizing that no one else could hear other people’s
thoughts. His older brothers thought him weak because he cried
while helping with daily chores like delivering baby calves or
butchering chickens. His sisters sometimes cried when chickens were
killed, but the men in his family couldn’t figure tears over a new
calf.
“She hurts so much,” he would say,
stroking the heifer in labor.
At the age of twelve, he began
responding verbally to people’s thoughts. This made several of his
teachers nervous—especially the ones who quietly hated teaching,
and Mr. Rhinehard, who was sleeping with a fifteen-year-old student
named Phyllis Dunmire.
Wade knew all this. He knew what they
thought of him. Most of the boys hated him because he was
different, and most of the girls wouldn’t be seen with anyone so
unpopular. Lisa McKendrick had a secret crush on him for a few
years, but she also worried much of the time about her private
nose-picking habit.
By reading the thoughts of animals, he
could always tell when a storm was coming. Animals knew a lot about
weather.
One year, when he was fourteen, he
stopped off for hamburgers with two of his brothers and mentioned
to Mr. Masterson and Mr. Hinthorn that they should bring their
cattle in early because of a thunderstorm. The weatherman on the
radio had predicted no storm.
That night, every farm within a
seventy-mile radius of the Sheffields’ lost half their wheat. In
anger and frustration, people blamed Wade because he’d warned
them.
Within a week, three farmers caught him
alone on the way to school and beat him with pitchfork handles
until his left leg and four ribs were broken. His oldest brother,
Joshua, put him in the back of a Ford pickup and drove him to the
Whitman County Hospital, where he was also diagnosed as suffering
from a concussion. The next few weeks were hazy. He didn’t remember
much besides a lot of bright lights, but when he woke up, a miracle
happened.
Dr. Geoffrey Van Tassel leaned down
over him and smiled.
“Welcome back,” the round-faced man
said. “Tell me what I’m thinking.”
Wade had grown practiced at hiding the
extent of his gift, but now he picked up bits and pieces of very
focused thought patterns. “A garden,” he whispered. “Strawberries
that your mother planted a long time ago.”
The eyes above him grew warm. “I have
an interesting proposition for you, young man, when you’re feeling
better.”
Wade often viewed that moment as the
real beginning of his life. Six weeks later, he arrived at the
Psychic Research Institute of Northern Colorado, on a set of rented
crutches, and began to realize his own self-worth. Suddenly, being
able to do something no one else could do had turned into a plus
instead of a severe minus.
Dr. Van Tassel was often with him then.
Apparently, Wade talked a good deal while in his state of delirium.
He’d been speaking aloud whatever the nurses happened to be
thinking. Sheila Osborne, a young nursing student from the Psychic
Institute, had been working on her internship at the Whitman County
Hospital during Wade’s stay.
The night before first seeing him,
she’d experienced the worst blind date of her life. The guy her
best friend had fixed her up with looked like he belonged on the
cover of Muscle Fitness. He wouldn’t
eat the popcorn she bought at the movies because it had salt and
butter. He called her babe and lectured her most of the night about
the best kind of workout for slimming down her thighs. And then he
actually expected her to sleep with him after his cellulite
comment.
Slamming bedpans into the cupboard of a
hospital room, she heard soft murmuring from the bed.
“I don’t have cellulite. And I was
wearing Levi’s. What would he know?”
She stopped in shock. A semiconscious
young man on the bed was rolling slowly in sweat-soaked sheets and
whispering her recent thoughts. Forgetting her own hurt vanity, she
leaned over him and wiped his face.
“Yeah, I had Levi’s on,” she said.
“What kind of shirt was I wearing?”
“No shirt—that pink sweater your mom
bought you last Christmas.”
His voice was barely audible, but she
heard him. Ten minutes later, she was on the phone to Dr. Van
Tassel in Colorado. “I think you’d better come up here. There’s
someone you need to see.”
That was the beginning. Sheila returned
to the institute and remained his friend. Although he never did
remember much about his stay at Whitman County, she related an
embarrassing story about him exposing an affair between a prominent
neurologist and his youngest male lab assistant. That hadn’t gone
over well in North Dakota.
Wade found some of the experiments he
participated in to be pointless. But he continued high school with
other young people like himself. Well, not quite like himself. No
one in the history of the institute had demonstrated anything close
to Wade’s telepathic ability. He was the golden boy. Everyone
wanted to be like him. But as the years passed, they kept asking
him a lot of redundant questions.
“What do you see in my mind, Wade? Do
you see words or pictures?”
“I see what you feel. Pictures, I
guess. I don’t know.”
Scores of PhDs in fields he didn’t
understand wrote papers about him.
The frightened, barely literate farm
boy from North Dakota slowly fell away, and a self-assured,
young-adult version of Wade took his place. In time, he began to
verbalize his responses on a higher level.
“What do you see in my mind, Wade? Do
you see words or pictures?”
“What do you see when I speak?” he
answered. “Do you see words coming from my mouth? How does your
mind know what I’m saying?”
In his senior year of high school, he
stopped studying for exams. Why should he study when the answers
were right there in the teacher’s head? He took Russian and began
speaking the language fluently in three weeks just by concentrating
on the instructor.
He lost his virginity to Sheila, but
then left quickly afterward when she began thinking that he’d been
okay but didn’t compare to her last boyfriend, Steve.
His teachers started making him take
his exams in a private room.
But most of them understood his
sometimes difficult behavior. He was
different, and they did not expect his schooling to be
normal.
However, when new arrivals came to the
institute, he was often put in charge of helping the young children
adjust to their new environment. Early on, Wade exhibited
strong—almost obsessive—tendencies toward protection over the
institute’s children, especially any who had been abused or
neglected by their families . . . due to their abilities. He
remembered all too well how it felt to be blamed and punished for
his gift.
The children responded well to his
assurances that everything would be different now, and he always
let them talk to him, even though he could simply read their
thoughts.
One thing Dr. Van Tassel did discover
was that if he, or anyone else, put a conscious effort into
blocking Wade, it wasn’t difficult to lock the young man out. But
the doctor never stopped thinking about the possibilities for
Wade’s gift.
“You could be anything you wanted, my
boy. Anything.”
The problem was that Wade didn’t know
what he wanted. At nineteen, his self-assured nature wavered when
he was faced with choosing a university. The memories of fear and
ostracism from his childhood had never quite passed away. The
people in Colorado seemed to like him, and Dr. Van Tassel was the
closest thing he had to a father. He hadn’t seen his own since
leaving for the institute.
His first thought was to go into social
services—specializing in child protection. But he wasn’t certain
that his motivation was correct, and he had no idea where he wished to attend college.
The issue eradicated itself when he
found out that he didn’t have to make a choice. The institute
arranged a full scholarship for him at Colorado State University in
Fort Collins. All he had to do was go back and work with Dr. Van
Tassel during summers and breaks on new tests or research projects.
Relief flooded through him. That was safe and perfect.
“What are you majoring in, son?”
“I don’t know. What should I major
in?”
“That’s up to you. As long as you
continue working with the doctors at the institute several times a
year, you can choose anything you want.”
More choices. All his life he had
hidden behind one wall or another. Now he was going back into
mainstream society, where people had once beaten him with pitchfork
handles.
College turned out to be quite
different than he expected, though—full of pretty girls, liberal
professors who questioned the government, and law students in black
wool coats walking past Peace Corps soon-to-bes. It was amazing.
But the pull to remain part of the institute, part of a safer
world, still influenced him. He decided to major in
psychology.
Dating, football games, and a part-time
job in the university bookstore became part of his life and made
him feel normal. Knowing how his girlfriends really felt about him
wasn’t an insurmountable problem. He simply took it for granted
that even people deeply in love had evil thoughts about each other
once in a while. He had long since grown used to reading the casual
malice behind someone’s smile. Those emotions were human.
His friends and lovers, however, didn’t
take his abilities so lightly. In his junior year, he fell hard for
an anthropology student named Karen. She had long, brown hair and
hazel eyes. He loved even the tiny freckles on her nose.
“This isn’t working,” she told him
after six months. “I can’t stand that you know what I’m thinking
every minute, and you’re a blank wall to me. I never know what
you’re feeling.”
“Then ask me.”
“I shouldn’t have to.”
That particular brand of pain and loss
was new to him. He flunked statistics and had to retake it in his
senior year.
After that, nothing of real note
happened in his life until midway through graduate school. When he
was twenty-three and working on his master’s in developmental
psychology, an inspector from the Los Angeles Police Department
flew out and made an appointment to speak to him while he was on
summer break at the institute. Dr. Van Tassel instructed Wade to
make an effort to stay out of the inspector’s mind.
“I’m Will Redington,” said a tall man
in a business suit, extending his hand. “Dr. Van Tassel’s told me a
little about you. We need you to do something for us.”
“What?” Wade asked, immediately
suspicious. This situation smelled as if he would have to make a
decision.
“Just listen to one of our departmental
psychologists talk to an officer,” Redington said calmly. “That’s
all we want you to do. You’ll be in a separate room with me, on the
other side of a two-way mirror. You can see and hear everything
that goes on. I just need you to tell me what the officer is
thinking during the interview.”
“Is he being accused of
something?”
“I can’t tell you that.”
Wade looked to Dr. Van Tassel for
help.
“It’s your choice, son. You don’t have
to do anything you don’t want to.”
“What would you do?”
“I’d use my gift to help as many people
as possible.”
That wasn’t much help. The inspector
looked as if he flossed with a bicycle chain.
“Okay,” Wade said uncertainly.
“When?”
“Two days.” Redington smiled. “We’ll
fly to California tomorrow.”
Two days later, Wade found himself in
an air-conditioned Los Angeles precinct. The interview room turned
out much like Wade expected it to be—small and windowless, with an
empty table and chairs. The officer in question’s name was Mark
Taylor. Wade was placed in an adjoining room on the other side of
the two-way mirror Redington had promised. He was told to watch and
listen to what went on.
Officer Taylor had a stoic, passive
expression and answered the questions being asked him with all the
emotion of a brass chess piece.
“Mark,” the psychologist began, “how
are you feeling about Christopher’s death right now?”
“No one forgets something like that
right away,” Taylor answered. “I’m angry, but I’m dealing. It
doesn’t affect my job performance.”
His answer sounded healthy and logical.
Wade gently reached out into the man’s mind, and then fell forward
out of his chair in shock. Hatred and rage and visions of violent
death flashed before him like an NC-17 film.
“Wade.” Someone was shaking him. He
looked up to see Inspector Redington’s face looming over him. “What
do you see?”
“Christopher . . .” Wade choked. “He’s
dead. They cut his throat open and pulled his tongue through the
hole.”
Slight surprise registered on
Redington’s face. “Yes, we know that. But what is Officer Taylor
thinking?”
“They killed Christopher,” Wade
shouted, “and you don’t even care!”
“Sssssh, keep your voice down.”
Wade started shaking. Christopher was
Mark’s partner. They’d been working under cover with some
small-time cocaine dealers, trying to flush out big game.
“Who killed Christopher?” Redington
asked suddenly.
Wade glared at him. “You know. You all
know.”
“Then tell me.”
“Juan Merinchez and the rest of those
spics.”
Wade seemed to be lost inside Mark’s
mind.
“And Juan deserves to die, doesn’t he?”
Redington asked.
“He’s already dead, you worthless piece
of shit. Somebody had to handle it.”
“If he’s dead, then where’s his
body?”
“Eddy’s Junkyard, in the trunk of a
’sixty-seven Fairlane.”
Redington went to the door quickly and
spoke to someone outside. Then Officer Taylor was taken away from
the little room on the other side of the mirror.
“Wade,” Redington said, “are you all
right?”
Ugly pictures moving like worms crawled
around the inside of Wade’s skull. He couldn’t stop shaking or get
up off the floor. Redington yelled out, “Somebody get me a glass of
water!”
A uniformed policewoman came in with a
paper cup. Redington held it to Wade’s mouth.
“Drink this.”
Cold water splashed between Wade’s
teeth. “Why did you do that to me?”
“We had to know. To be honest, I don’t
think I believed what Van Tassel said about you.”
He leaned down to help Wade get
up.
“Don’t touch me!”
Redington pulled back slightly,
withdrawing his hand. “I know you’re thinking that none of this is
fair. Not to you. Not to Mark. But our psychologist did an
extensive evaluation and found him fit and ready for duty. Mark’s
been running around with a badge and a gun for two weeks now. Is
that fair? Is that right?”
Wade’s head was beginning to clear.
“No,” he whispered. “He shouldn’t have a gun. He’s dangerous . . .
and racist. But he doesn’t care about very many people, not even
his wife. He cared about Christopher.”
“That doesn’t give him the right to
kill someone.”
“Did you know he’d killed
Merinchez?”
“I had a pretty good idea. We just
needed a body. And you may just have given us that.”
Less than an hour later, two officers
found Juan Merinchez’s body in the trunk of a ’67 Fairlane exactly
where Wade had seen it in Mark Taylor’s mind. Wade left the
precinct as quickly as possible, flew home, and never checked back
to find out what happened to Taylor. He didn’t want to know.
Long ago, Wade had learned to slowly
examine his feelings. Letting them all in at once caused poor or
quick judgments. The experience in Mark Taylor’s mind never left
him. Those thoughts had been the ugliest string of images he’d ever
seen. They would be with him always. But then anger set in . . .
and guilt. That psychologist must have been blind. What if
Inspector Redington had flown Wade out to California a few days
earlier, before Mark Taylor had killed Merinchez? Could the
situation have been averted? Perhaps Merinchez would still be
alive, and Mark wouldn’t be facing murder charges. Or back even
further, what if Wade had actually been working under cover with
Mark and Christopher? Could he have picked up that Merinchez had
grown wise and then helped avoid Christopher’s death at all? What
if?
The questions never left him for long.
After receiving a master’s degree in developmental psychology, he
went on to a PhD in criminal psychology at the University of
Colorado in Boulder. Shortly before graduation, he applied to
twenty-seven police departments around the country for a position
as staff psychologist. He was offered three, and finally accepted a
place in Portland, Oregon, because the department seemed friendly
but overworked and in need of someone like Wade.
Wade wished to be needed.
“We’ll miss you,” Dr. Van Tassel said,
smiling, “but I think you’ve made the right choice. You thought I
wanted you to be a professor or a scientist, didn’t you?”
“Sometimes, yes.”
“It’s your gift, Wade. We can study it
and write about it. But you’ve been searching for something else
your whole life. Perhaps you’ve found it. Come home for
Christmas.”
With the first phase of his life over,
Wade moved smoothly into the next. He found a loft-style apartment
that would have cost him twice as much in Denver. The weather
wasn’t to his taste. It rained a lot. But the trees were green, the
city was old but not too old, vogue but not too vogue. He thought
he could be happy here.
The job was difficult at first. He was
responsible for the files on forty-four men and women. In spite of
his own innate ability, there was a mountain of red tape to be
danced around every time someone gave him cause for concern,
especially when Captain McNickel wanted the officer in question
back on the street.
A rookie named Joe Tashet got stabbed
in the side while running down a fleeing mugger. After healing up
and receiving a clean bill of health from a medical doctor, he was
handed over to the police psychologist.
“No way,” Wade stated flatly to Captain
McNickel in private. “He’s terrified. It’s all too new. Give him a
little more time.”
“We don’t have any more time. Unless
you tell me he’s going to piss on the street and then shoot a
couple of old ladies, I need him back out tomorrow.”
“What about his partner? Is it fair to
send someone else out with a panicked rookie cop?”
“He needs to get back on the horse,
Sheffield.”
McNickel was the only person who
refused to call him Dr. Sheffield.
But Wade found that understandable.
After all, he was barely twenty-seven and looked even younger. It
would be hard for a crotchety old geezer like McNickel to refer to
him by a title like “doctor.”
What Wade didn’t like or understand was
McNickel’s constant refusal to accept sound diagnoses. But the Joe
Tashet case ended some of those problems.
Less than a month after Joe’s psych
evaluation, his partner was shot and killed by a drunken husband as
the two officers were investigating a domestic battle. At the first
sign of a gun, Joe bolted, leaving his partner with no
backup.
McNickel listened to Wade more often
after that.
Some of Wade’s fantasies and
expectations never came to pass. He didn’t work under cover. He was
occasionally asked to evaluate suspects and appear in court, but
McNickel ordered him to “play down the psychic bit and just do your
job.”
Wade was often tempted to look inside
McNickel’s head and find out what made the old man so bad-tempered.
Maybe his sex life was lousy . . . though Wade’s own hadn’t exactly
been fireworks either. His job kept him hopping. Most of his duties
consisted of helping exhausted, bored, and/or disillusioned cops
whose work lives were drastically invading their home lives. Time
passed quickly.
On November 7, 2005, at 5:32 P.M., Wade
met Detective Dominick Vasundara, a transfer from New York. Wade
was finishing up some paperwork in his office late that afternoon
when a deep voice sounded from the open doorway.
“Captain told me to see you.”
Looking up, Wade saw a man of medium
height and stocky build, with stubble covering his wide jaw, and
short black hair. He was dressed in faded jeans and a sweatshirt
with the sleeves ripped off. The man wasn’t large, but somehow he
seemed to block the entire doorway.
“Can I help you?” Wade asked.
“Yeah, I’m Dominick. I don’t know what
you can do. The captain told me to see you on my way out. Something
about starting a file.”
Wade was tired. He’d had a long day,
and the last thing he wanted to do was start a new file. He should
already have this guy’s records anyway.
“Are you a transfer?”
“Yeah, New York.”
“Really? Did you request to come
here?”
“All that stuff’s on my
application.”
At that, Wade instantly entered
Dominick’s mind. He was too beat to play verbal volleyball.
Expecting the new arrival to simply sit
there for a few seconds dripping in attitude, Wade read a few
normal, sexually motivated images before he saw surprise flicker
across Dominick’s face.
“What the . . . ?” He blocked Wade.
“Stay out of my head.”
“Did you feel that?” Wade sat up,
startled. “Could you feel me focusing in on your thoughts?”
“What do you think I am, stupid?”
“No, but you shouldn’t have been able
to—”
“Look, I’m not getting paid to be here
yet. If you need anything, ask in a hurry and let me go.”
This guy was some piece of work. First,
he acted as if setting up his psych file was an annoying chore, and
then he acted as if someone pushing around inside his head was an
everyday event.
“Do you want to get a beer?” Wade asked
suddenly, surprising himself as much as Dominick.
“What?”
“I’ve been here since six this morning.
There’s a little sports bar down the street . . . good nachos. Why
don’t we finish up down there?”
The unshaven New Yorker stared at him
for a few seconds and then shrugged. “Yeah, sure. Why not? I’m not
trying to be a pain. People have just been jacking me around since
noon. I thought I’d be out of here a couple hours ago.”
Three beers later, they were sitting in
Spankey T’s Sports Bar watching the Seattle Seahawks get killed by
the Chicago Bears on a large-screen TV. Wade sat there struggling
for a way to broach the subject of how Dominick had known about
blocking a psychic entry. The problem solved itself when his
companion turned to him during a time-out and asked, “Hey, where’d
you learn telepathy?”
For a moment the question threw him. “I
didn’t learn it anywhere ...”
Wade had never considered himself
bigoted or socially biased. But hearing a word like “telepathy”
come out of Dominick’s mouth surprised him. He usually imagined
overmuscled guys with Bronx accents who wore torn-up sweatshirts
would speak in one- or two-syllable words.
“I learned to focus it,” he went on,
“at the Psychic Research Institute in Colorado.”
“Really? Did your folks sell
you?”
“What? No . . . I wanted to go. My
folks were ready to burn me at the stake. How’d you know to block
me?”
Dominick put his beer down. “Spent a
couple years with kids like you in high school. Some old guys,
doctors, paid my folks a lot of money to borrow me for a
while.”
The tiny hairs on Wade’s arms began to
prickle. “Why?”
“I can touch things—almost anything—and
tell you where they’ve been and who else has touched them.”
“Psychometry?”
“Yeah.”
“Were you involved with a research
center?”
“A what? No, it wasn’t like that. These
guys worked for NYU, in this little building off campus. They had
about six of us. They made us do a lot of stupid things. Pretty
useless. One guy a little younger than me had what you
have—telepathy. He and I used to practice on each other.”
Wade sat there, fascinated. Even at the
institute, psychometry was an unusual ability. Dominick spoke of it
in the same tone he might use to say he was good at calculus.
“So what made you join the police
force?” Wade asked.
His companion’s forehead wrinkled
slightly, as though he wasn’t sure how to answer. “I couldn’t
always, you know, do it . . . when they gave me things to examine.
Sometimes I could see dozens of pictures about an object, who it
belonged to, where it’d been. But sometimes I didn’t see
anything.”
Wade didn’t follow him. “So that made
you want to be a cop?”
“No. One day Dr. Morris—he worked with
me the most—shows up with this guy in a suit. I was about fifteen
then. Anyway, they take me into a back room and hand me a ripped-up
white sweater with dried blood all over it.”
Wade went cold. “What happened?”
“I threw up.” Dominick’s voice dropped,
and he seemed to slide uncomfortably back into the past.
“I’m sorry,” Wade whispered. The
description was too close to home.
“It wouldn’t have been so bad,”
Dominick went on, “but they didn’t believe everything I told
them.”
“What did you see?”
“A dark-haired guy with green eyes,
wearing a black tux. He tore this girl’s throat open with his teeth
and started drinking her blood. Since she was wearing the sweater,
I saw it all through her eyes. I gave a full description of the
guy. Three witnesses, including an informant bartender, claimed to
see someone who exactly matched the description leave the Garden
Lounge with her less than an hour before she died.”
“Did they ever arrest anyone?”
“No, I don’t think so. I was just a
kid.”
“So you joined up to help?”
“Yeah, something like that.”
Wade looked into his glass at the
foaming beer. This man sitting next to him certainly wasn’t someone
he’d actively seek out as a friend. But he felt a strange
companionship, an understanding.
“I forgot you’re the staff shrink,”
Dominick said. “You think I’m cracked, don’t you?”
“No, I was just thinking about how you
got involved with the force. We have a lot in common. Maybe I’ll
tell you sometime.”
Dominick looked away. “I gotta go. It’s
getting late, and I just flew in this morning.”
“Where’re you staying?”
“I’m going to find a hotel. Someone
told me apartments are pretty cheap. I’ll start looking
tomorrow.”
“Compared to New York? Hell, yes. Hey,
my couch folds out into a bed. You could crash there tonight. We
can pick up a newspaper on the way home. You could go through the
classifieds and call on apartments from my place tomorrow. I’ll be
at work all day.”
“You married?”
“Me? No, if I was, she’d divorce me for
criminal negligence. Job keeps me hopping.” He jumped off the
barstool. “Come on.”
Dominick looked too tired to argue.
They picked up a pizza and a newspaper on the way home. That was
the beginning.
Dominick found a one-bedroom apartment
only a mile from Wade’s place. It often struck Wade as odd that the
two of them had little in common and never discussed personal
matters, but they spent four or five evenings a week together, just
watching movies or going out for beer. Some nights, Wade would sit
at his desk in the living room and work while Dominick just hung
around entertaining himself. They seemed comfortable without having
to talk.
Instead of sticking out like a sore
thumb, Dominick fit in well at the Portland precinct. He was fair,
hard, tough, never late for work, and wrote up reports with
remarkable clarity and accuracy. He displayed a few eccentricities.
For one, he carried a .357 revolver instead of a more
standard-issue automatic pistol. He said he’d learned to shoot with
this gun and refused to replace it. And two, he seemed to possess
no sense of humor—none. But these things were minor in the grand
scheme.
“I wish we could clone him,” Captain
McNickel said.
The one problem Wade had with his
friend was an unfamiliar feeling of blindness. He hadn’t realized
how heavily he relied upon telepathy in his job. With Dominick, he
had to actually judge facial expressions and reactions. Making a
correct analysis seemed impossible.
“Why don’t you let me in?” he asked one
day while riding to lunch in Dominick’s police car. “I’m trained at
this, you know. I could make a decent evaluation if you’d just stop
blocking me.”
“No. How’d you like it if I picked up a
pair of your underwear and told you who you screwed last
week?”
Wade winced. “It wouldn’t be like that.
Most people think about sex forty times a day. I’m used to
that.”
“Just drop it.”
Wade became so concerned that he
suggested to Captain McNickel they assign Dominick’s evaluations to
another psychologist.
“I can’t do it,” Wade said. “I’m used
to knowing exactly what they’re thinking. A normal psychologist
would be accustomed to relying on instinct, on judgment calls. I’m
not.”
“I hear you two have been hanging out
together a lot.”
“Yes, we have . . . we have some things
in common.”
“You two? Like what?”
“I don’t know. We both like
football.”
“Yeah, right.”
“Just think about what I said, Cap,
okay?”
McNickel took the advice under
consideration, but Dominick always played the role of the perfect
cop, so nothing came of it.
Years passed and little changed. On the
morning of March 2, 2008, Wade and Dominick were riding around at
the end of a night shift with a rookie trainee. The shift had been
boring and uneventful. They were almost ready to call it a night
and get some breakfast when a female voice on the radio asked them
to check out a noise disturbance. The rookie acknowledged the call,
and Dominick rolled his eyes.
“Great, I’m starving, and we get to
call a halt to a beer blast. Now, in New York, nobody would even
notice. They got noise twenty-four hours a day.”
Wade smiled.
They pulled up in front of an old
Tudor-style home to the sound of classical music screaming out the
windows.
“Jesus Christ, what is that?” Dominick
growled.
“Tchaikovsky,” Wade answered with mock
snobbery. “Francesca da Rimini.”
“Oh, thank you so much. Now I can die
happy. No wonder the neighbors are complaining.”
All three got out of the car, but it
was the rookie’s job to handle the situation. As they walked up the
lawn, a half-dressed man burst out the front door and onto the
porch.
Before anyone could react or even
blink, Dom had his gun out and aimed. That’s another thing Dominick
was always good for. As the man on the porch half turned before
leaping off, Wade thought he saw dried blood in his hair and on his
back. The whole world seemed frozen in a single moment. Wade’s feet
wouldn’t move.
The man on the porch leapt off, crying
out something none of them ever understood. On instinct, Wade
reached out into his mind, looking for anything that might help.
Then the impossible happened.
Fire from right in front of him lit up
the morning sky. Flames burst from every pore of the man’s skin, as
if someone had dumped gasoline all over him and pitched a lit
cigarette.
But Wade didn’t smell any gas.
Then the pain hit him. His knees
buckled.
“Dominick!”
Every muscle, every sinew of his body
was being ripped open and left to bleed on the grass. All the
separate little cords of his brain were exploding in an ugly mass.
Pictures of a thousand deaths, a thousand lives lost, poured
through him, and he was powerless to stop the visions.
He felt hands on his shoulders, holding
him up off the grass.
“Call for help!” somebody yelled.
Then he felt her. The mind was
feminine. He knew that from the first second of contact.
Pain.
Loss.
Terror.
Help me, he
projected.
Then she was gone.
Incredibly strong hands lifted him and
carried him through a doorway.
“Dom?”
Wade was four inches taller but twenty
pounds lighter than his friend. Dominick laid him down on a couch
as if he were a puppy.
“Wade, wake up.”
Wade sobbed once and grabbed his own
head.
“Stop it!” Dominick’s voice cut through
the echoing pain. “I don’t know what to do.”
“She’s in here.”
“Who’s in here?”
“There’s a woman in here, somewhere.
Listen to me.”
For an answer, Dominick grabbed his
shirt collar. “It was him. That guy who ripped the white sweater.
It’s him. I saw his face. He’s everywhere. I can’t even think in
here. You’ve gotta wake up!”
The agony in Wade’s head began to clear
at the panic in Dominick’s voice. As he opened his eyes, the first
things he noticed were coarse black hairs on the back of a hand
grasping his shirt. Then he took in a pair of china-blue eyes on
the brink of hysteria.
“Get out, Dom,” he whispered. “You
should get out of here.”
If Wade had been Dominick, he simply
would have picked his friend up and carried him outside. But he
wasn’t. The ache in his head still lingered. He didn’t know what to
do.
“I need some water,” he whispered. “And
look for a woman. She’s here. Where is that rookie?”
“I don’t know. Are you awake?”
“Yeah, don’t touch anything. Go outside
and call for backup.”
“It’s him, Wade. The one they wouldn’t
believe me about. But he looked the same. Exactly the same as
fifteen years ago.”
“Do you see a woman?”
“No, why do you keep asking
that?”
“She’s here. She felt it.”
“Felt what?”
“When that man died . . . it
hurt.”
It more than hurt, but he couldn’t
explain it. Dominick’s eyes hadn’t cleared yet. Something about the
room had him nearly hyper-ventilating.
“Get me outside,” Wade said. “I can’t
think in here.”
Dominick dragged him outside. The porch
seemed aged and faded, waiting to crumble like a yellow leaf in
November. They moved past it and sat on the weed-filled grass,
staring at the burning spot on the lawn.
“Do you smell gasoline?” Wade
asked.
“No. Did you pick anything out of his
head?”
“I didn’t have time.”
“It’s him. It’s the same guy.”
Wade didn’t know how to respond and
thankfully didn’t have to. Two squad cars with blaring, screaming
sirens flashing red and blue lights pulled up. Uniformed men were
running all around them.
“Where’s the body?” someone
asked.
“Right there,” Dominick answered
coldly, pointing to the burning spot on the grass.
“What happened?”
“You figure it out.”
Dominick looked back at the house. “We
have to go back. Can you walk?”
“Yeah,” Wade answered, “but you aren’t
going back in that house. The cavalry’s here now. Let them check
into it.”
“If you won’t come with me, I’ll go by
myself.”
“It can’t be the same man. Think about
what kind of a coincidence that would be. The same murderer from
New York living in Portland—after you’ve transferred to the local
police force—and you just happen to be on duty the morning he
decides to cash his own ticket? I don’t think so.”
“Then come back inside with me.”
Wade was exhausted, almost beyond
caring. He needed to sleep this off. But something in Dominick’s
voice made him listen. Dom could be aggressive and high-strung and
difficult to know, but he wasn’t irrational.
“One condition,” Wade said.
“What?”
“You let me in your head the whole
time. If I feel you losing it, we leave.”
Dominick’s face darkened. For a moment,
Wade thought he was going to hear the usual “No way.”
“Okay,” Dominick answered.
“You’ll leave if I tell you?”
“Yeah, just come on.”
For months Wade had wanted permission
to read his friend’s mind, explore his thoughts. Now that it was
actually happening, he felt almost too drained, too numb to go
through with it.
Upon reentering the house, the first
thing they heard was one of the other cops choking in the
kitchen.
“There.” Dominick pointed to a large
photograph over the hearth. He walked right over and put his hands
on it.
The girl in the picture was different
from anyone Wade had ever seen. She reminded him vaguely of a stalk
of wheat. Her age was difficult, impossible, to peg. She might have
been thirteen or twenty-eight. Her huge hazel-brown eyes
complemented her pale face and blond hair. She sat on a
forest-green velvet couch, with shelves of leather-bound books
behind her head.
“Who is she?” Wade whispered.
Dominick’s eyes remained closed. When
he didn’t answer, Wade gently reached into his mind and was blocked
instantly.
“Stop it, Dom.”
No answer.
“Hey, you guys,” a middle-aged officer
blurted out, running into the living room. “Hurry up. Jake found
something downstairs.”
“What?” Wade snapped.
“Loose boards and a stink you won’t
believe.”
Dominick opened his eyes.
“Bodies,” he said. “Jake found
bodies.”
Wade stared at him. “How do you know
that?”
Dominick pulled his hands off the photo
and moved quickly toward the stairwell. The first thing Wade
noticed in the cellar was the smell—different, sweeter than the
stench from the kitchen. Dominick dropped down to help Jake tear at
the floor.
“They’re here, under the boards,” he
said to Jake. “You smelled them, didn’t you?”
Wade had completely lost control of the
situation. He’d lost control of Dominick, lost control of reality.
Then he looked up from the sight of the two men pulling at the
floorboards to a painting resting against the wall, a misty,
ethereal oil painting.
“Dom, come look at this.”
His friend ignored him and kept on
digging like a man possessed. Wade walked over to the painting. Her
face was unmistakable: the girl in the photo upstairs. Her eyes
stared out at him as though she were right here and alive.
Down at the bottom of the portrait was
an unintelligible signature and a date: 1872. Was it authentic? How
could this girl be the same one in the photo upstairs? Her
great-great-grandmother perhaps? He looked closer. No, it was the
same girl. No two people could share eyes like that.
Jake began choking. Without turning
around, Wade let his mind drift into the young, retching
policeman’s. He saw through Jake’s eyes and found himself staring
at a half-decomposed woman with red hair. He wasn’t
surprised.
“Dom, please stop digging and come look
at this.”
A moment later, he felt his friend
standing next to him.
“Touch it,” Wade whispered. “It’s the
same girl, isn’t it?”
Dominick stared at the painting for a
long time. Then he reached one hand out and placed it over her
face.
“What the hell are you guys doing?”
Jake managed to spit.
Wade ignored him. “Is it the same
girl?”
Dominick’s china-blue eyes somehow
seemed even lighter than usual. His fingers ran softly over the
painting as though in a caress.
“Yeah, it’s her. I can’t tell anything
else. She’s like a wall. Maybe the painting’s too old.”
“Will you two get away from that
picture and call the coroner? We’ve got a mess over here.” Jake’s
voice had grown stronger.
The room seemed small. Wade had turned
to answer when Dominick’s hand closed over his wrist. It
hurt.
“They aren’t going to believe us, Wade.
They’ll say we’re crazy or put us on vacation.”
Everything in Wade wanted to argue,
wanted to play this horror by the book. To do otherwise would mean
making decisions. But he knew Dominick was right. Captain McNickel
wouldn’t want to hear this, much less believe it.
“We’re on our own,” Dom said.
Wade didn’t look at the bodies. He
stared at a mass of painted wheat-gold hair. “Don’t say anything
yet. We still need the precinct computers. I saw a red Mazda parked
out front.”
Dom was aggressive and high-strung and
hard to know, but this time he was right. They were on their
own.