40
IT WAS FASCINATING and immensely satisfying, and now Quinton knew why his subconscious had allowed him to make the small mistakes that had allowed Rain Man his short-lived freedom. Having faced defeat and overcome it by recapturing the fox, he was now able to relish the man’s demise with unsurpassed satisfaction.
This is what Quinton Gauld told himself as he gazed at the scene he’d reconstructed. There sat Brad Raines, the man who would steal his bride, tied to the same post he’d escaped from, albeit only the stub.
Quinton had snuck up behind the man with supreme confidence, gun aimed at the back of his head just in case he turned, in which case Quinton would have shot him before hauling him inside. As it turned out, the man’s pounding heart had likely prevented him from hearing the footfall of Quinton’s feather-light feet on the soft ground.
One blow to the back of his head had incapacitated the man, and Quinton had dragged him through the door and secured him to the post. Blood trailed down the man’s neck from the fresh cut on his scalp. He was finally waking to play his role. The scene was intoxicating. Beautiful.
This is what Quinton told himself, but the buzzing in his brain kept him from truly relishing his victory in the way he was meant to.
He paced around Rain Man, absorbing his suffering, curious as to why this man would risk so much for a woman whom society had sequestered away in an institution.
He looked down at the slumped form lying on his side. “Please sit up.” He nudged the man with his foot. “Up, up, we don’t have all night. It takes more time than you realize to drill and drain a human body.”
Rain Man groaned. Because his hands were tied behind his back, he struggled to get his legs under his body and sit. The man mumbled a curse.
“Please, we’re beyond that, aren’t we? Hmm? Cursing, shouting, spitting, pulling against the ropes—all behaviors that only undermine people like you and me.”
Rain Man stared up at him with dark eyes as if he was trying to explode Quinton’s head with this bitter stare.
“And stop looking at me as if I’m some kind of monster. True, I am a monster, but then neither cursing, shouting, spitting, struggling against the ropes, nor harsh stares will help you any more than they helped Nikki. So let’s be civilized for a moment, shall we?”
The man’s glare did not soften. “What kind of men are we, Quinton?”
“Real men. Stripped of the facade social conditioning paints on the masses. We see the truth, you and me. I am the hound from hell and you are the crafty fox out to steal my prize. We both recognize beauty and we are both in love with Paradise.”
“But that’s wrong, isn’t it? I love Paradise. You hate her. Remember?”
“Well then, I love to hate her. Either way, we both know how to love.” He frowned at his begging carcass of an adversary. “This is the part where you begin to utter bitter protests, attempting to set me straight. One or two would be okay, get them out of your system.”
The man didn’t, but then Quinton didn’t expect that he would. Rain Man’s resolve began to melt from his face, replaced by a sagging look of defeat. It was a bit pathetic, really. Watching such a worthy mind reduced to this defeated slab of flesh… Quinton had to hold back a sudden urge to kick him in the jaw. Wake up, wake up, you holy ghost! Don’t let me walk all over you like this!
“You look pathetic,” he said.
A tear broke from Rain Man’s right eye. His weakness was intolerable! Quinton considered changing his plan on the spot. He should put this shallow shell of a ghost out of his misery with a single blow to his head. Seeing a weak man beg for his life was expected and therefore acceptable. Seeing a frail woman cry for mercy was satisfying because she was only playing a role that reflected the greater weakness of the world.
But watching this fox of a ghost crumble was beyond the pale. Like the boy whom he’d slapped in Elway’s eating establishment, Brad Raines needed a good blow to his head.
“Disgusting,” Quinton said.
“You’ll never catch her,” Rain Man said. His tone was strong and laced with conviction.
It occurred to Quinton then that the fox wasn’t crying for himself. His tears were for Paradise. This wasn’t a picture of a shriveling mouse accepting his defeat. It was, in fact, the very opposite.
Rain Man was uncaring of his own life, crushed by the prospect of harm to the one he loved. His tears were for Paradise, not for himself. This was not cowardice but nobility.
Quinton was so upset by the realization that for a few moments he couldn’t speak. But even in such a frayed state he had to ask himself why. And even as he asked himself why, his buzzing intelligence gave him the answer.
He was jealous of Rain Man.
Insanely jealous. He was, in fact, as jealous of Rain Man’s love and nobility as he was of the beauty in Paradise, God’s favorite.
It occurred to him that his hands were shaking badly. He looked down at them, mesmerized. This, then, was his greatest test. Not abducting seven brides, not draining their blood to present them unblemished, not realizing his true purpose, not manipulating Rain Man for his purpose, not even luring Paradise in with Rain Man’s screams of pain.
His greatest challenge was to be who he was. To be what society wanted but didn’t have the guts to be. To resist the respect and honor that tempted him at this very moment and to embrace the evil that haunted him.
“I find you disgusting,” he said, and he walked to the table, picked up the yellow battery-operated drill, and squeezed the trigger.
The strong DeWalt electric motor whirred smoothly, filling him with calm. He’d adjust the tension on the clutch so that it would cut cleanly through bone without binding.
There was something about bones. Something most people found deeply disturbing about the prospect of reaching through the skin of the human body and tinkering with the inner, hidden self. No one wanted their veneer penetrated. By drilling Quinton accomplished two important tasks at once.
First, he made a small opening through the heel that allowed gravity to efficiently drain the body’s blood supply. But second, drilling penetrated the facade and exposed the true bone of the bride. Or, in this case, the man.
Satisfied that the drill was fully operational, he lowered it to his side and walked over to Rain Man, who watched him with a surprisingly neutral stare. Was there no end to the man’s valor? He could see that it might take more than one or two holes to make the man scream.
“Now, listen to me,” Quinton said. “This isn’t necessarily personal…”
“Yes it is.”
A beat. “Okay, so it is somewhat personal. The point is, I need you to scream. Your life doesn’t mean much to me. But I need the little bride to come, you understand? I think she might be stupid enough to have fallen for you now that you’ve rescued her. So I need you to scream and scream like a little boy who’s having his teeth drilled without a drop of Novocain.”
Rain Man seemed unruffled. “You can’t catch her. She’s gone. I can scream until you beg me to stop. But you won’t draw Paradise in.”
“Really?” Quinton pressed the trigger briefly and the drill whined. “You seem to think you know her quite well.”
Rain Man was still unimpressed. “Even if she were close enough to hear my screams, she knows there’s no way she can stop you. She can’t burn the barn down, she can’t shoot you, she can’t jump in the truck and drive off, she’s powerless. She knew that before agreeing to run. You can kill me, but you will never touch Paradise.”
“Is that so? And what’s to stop me from tracking her down next week?”
“I’m not that stupid. You’ll never find her where she’s going. As far as you’re concerned, Paradise no longer exists. She’ll be in a vault so far from you that no attempt on your part will turn up a single lead.”
The sincerity in his tone unnerved Quinton.
“You know, for a while there, I was bothered by your character. But now you’ve turned into a bad liar, and it’s making me feel better about my decision to kill you. I hate pretenders.”
“Shut up and drill me, Quinton. I’ll scream my head off and it won’t help you.”
Could the holy fox have outfoxed him yet again? Why was he inviting pain? Perhaps he really had lost his mind. Quinton’s nerves were uncharacteristically taut. He was deeply bothered.
So he leaned over, squeezed the drill’s trigger, and pressed the quarter-inch diamond-tipped bit against the flat of the man’s shin. The motor screamed high, then ground slower as it caught.
He straightened and examined his work. The man was looking up at him, face white, lips trembling, leg bleeding. But he did not scream or even moan.
“No scream?”
He had to be careful or Rain Man would pass out.
“Scream, Rain Man. Scream until you make me want to plug my ears.”
Nothing.
“No? Because you lied to me, Rain Man. You won’t scream because she can hear, and you’re afraid that if she hears you scream she’ll come. Because that’s what beautiful people do, Rain Man, we both know that. They come running to save the poor saps in trouble.”
Nothing from him. With each passing moment Quinton respected, hated, loved, loathed the man more.
“I’m going to drill you full of holes, and if you don’t scream, then I’m going to scream, and she’ll come running, and when she does I’m going to drill her, too.”
The man’s eyes darted over his shoulder, then widened.
“Hello, Quinton.”
Except for over the phone, it was the first time he’d heard her voice in seven years, and the sound of those sweet, tender vocal cords pierced him in a way no sound this side of heaven or hell ever could.
He turned slowly toward the main door. There, dressed in her red blouse and cutoff jean shorts, stood Paradise. Her arms hung by her sides and her unblinking gaze held him.
This was also the first time Quinton had looked into her eyes since that night so long ago. Those devastatingly beautiful eyes.
“Hello, Paradise,” he said.
The Bride Collector
Ted Dekker's books
- As the Pig Turns
- Before the Scarlet Dawn
- Between the Land and the Sea
- Breaking the Rules
- Escape Theory
- Fairy Godmothers, Inc
- Father Gaetano's Puppet Catechism
- Follow the Money
- In the Air (The City Book 1)
- In the Shadow of Sadd
- In the Stillness
- Keeping the Castle
- Let the Devil Sleep
- My Brother's Keeper
- Over the Darkened Landscape
- Paris The Novel
- Sparks the Matchmaker
- Taking the Highway
- Taming the Wind
- Tethered (Novella)
- The Adjustment
- The Amish Midwife
- The Angel Esmeralda
- The Antagonist
- The Anti-Prom
- The Apple Orchard
- The Astrologer
- The Avery Shaw Experiment
- The Awakening Aidan
- The B Girls
- The Back Road
- The Ballad of Frankie Silver
- The Ballad of Tom Dooley
- The Barbarian Nurseries A Novel
- The Barbed Crown
- The Battered Heiress Blues
- The Beginning of After
- The Beloved Stranger
- The Betrayal of Maggie Blair
- The Better Mother
- The Big Bang
- The Bird House A Novel
- The Blessed
- The Blood That Bonds
- The Blossom Sisters
- The Body at the Tower
- The Body in the Gazebo
- The Body in the Piazza
- The Bone Bed
- The Book of Madness and Cures
- The Boy from Reactor 4
- The Boy in the Suitcase
- The Boyfriend Thief
- The Bull Slayer
- The Buzzard Table
- The Caregiver
- The Caspian Gates
- The Casual Vacancy
- The Cold Nowhere
- The Color of Hope
- The Crown A Novel
- The Dangerous Edge of Things
- The Dangers of Proximal Alphabets
- The Dante Conspiracy
- The Dark Road A Novel
- The Deposit Slip
- The Devil's Waters
- The Diamond Chariot
- The Duchess of Drury Lane
- The Emerald Key
- The Estian Alliance
- The Extinct
- The Falcons of Fire and Ice
- The Fall - By Chana Keefer
- The Fall - By Claire McGowan
- The Famous and the Dead
- The Fear Index
- The Flaming Motel
- The Folded Earth
- The Forrests
- The Exceptions
- The Gallows Curse
- The Game (Tom Wood)
- The Gap Year
- The Garden of Burning Sand
- The Gentlemen's Hour (Boone Daniels #2)
- The Getaway
- The Gift of Illusion
- The Girl in the Blue Beret
- The Girl in the Steel Corset
- The Golden Egg
- The Good Life
- The Green Ticket
- The Healing
- The Heart's Frontier
- The Heiress of Winterwood
- The Heresy of Dr Dee
- The Heritage Paper
- The Hindenburg Murders
- The History of History