“Yes, I suppose you’re right.”
“Well, I’m sorry, but if you don’t mind, I have to ask you to leave. As much as it pains me to say it, I don’t think Dr. Statler is coming back, and I consider our lease null and void. In other words, this space is now private property.” He turns, gesturing toward the waiting room.
“I need to hear it again.”
“I’m sorry?” he says.
She notices the band of sweat on his upper lip as her phone vibrates in her coat pocket. “You were the last person to see my husband, the night he disappeared. I need to hear it again. How he looked. If he seemed—”
“I told you already,” Albert cuts in impatiently. “He looked fine. He said good night, and that was it.”
“Said good night?” she says. “You said he didn’t see you. When we spoke on the phone the next morning, you said you saw him run by the window, outside.”
“Did I?” He takes a step closer. “My memory’s not quite what it used to be. But please . . .”
He reaches for her arm, and something about the feel of his hand registers as familiar. “It’s you,” she says, the image flashing in her mind. “The man I bumped into on my way out of the Parlor two days ago. That was you. You were wearing blue eyeglasses then—”
“Annie!”
She freezes at the sound of the voice, coming from the ceiling. She turns toward the vent. “Annie! I’m here, upstairs. Call the police.” It’s Sam’s voice. “Please, he’s dangerous.”
“Sam!” She’s flooded with a momentary rush of relief—I knew it, I knew he was alive—before the terror takes hold. She turns and looks at Albert. His eyes are wide and vacant.
“Did Dr. Statler just call me dangerous?” he asks, his lips trembling. “It’s your fault,” he whispers. “You shouldn’t have come here. We were in the middle of something.”
Terrified, she sprints past him toward the door. He grabs her arm, but she pulls free and runs through the waiting room, out the door. Albert chases her down the path, grabbing her ankle as she bounds up the porch steps. She kicks at him, and her heel makes contact with his chin, sending him to the ground.
She opens the front door of his house and stumbles into the foyer. Her hands are shaking as she turns the dead bolt, locking the door behind her.
“Sam!” she screams, rushing into the living room. “Where are you?”
“I’m here! Annie!”
She follows the sound of his voice. Through a kitchen, down a hallway. There’s a door at the end and she throws it open. Sam is inside, lying on the floor, his legs in casts, his cheek bruised and swollen. She clasps her hand to her mouth. “Sam.”
“You found me,” he says.
There’s a noise in the living room—Albert is inside—and she closes the door, blocking it with her body. She snatches her phone from her pocket, her hands trembling as she swipes the cracked screen, trying to wake it up. It takes several tries, but she gets it finally.
“Hurry,” Sam whispers, as she hears Albert’s footsteps in the hallway. She pulls up the phone app as the door slams open behind her, knocking her so hard she drops the phone. She scrambles for it as Albert Bitterman marches into the room, shouting. She reaches for the phone, Albert still yelling, but it’s Sam’s voice that stays with her, calling her name, when the shovel in Albert Bitterman’s hands makes contact with her skull, smashing everything to pieces.
Chapter 53
“No!” Sam screams. “Annie!” He crawls toward her as Albert leans down and picks up her phone. “Come on, Annie, say something.” Albert is standing in the doorway, a gash on his chin, the shovel hanging limply from his hands. “Why, Albert? Why did you do that?”
“You told her to call the police,” Albert says, his body trembling, his face ghost-white. “You said I was dangerous.”
“Albert—”
“You said you’d get me help, that you’d come with me to the hospital. But you lied to me, Sam. Again.”
Albert walks out of the room, and Sam hears him in the kitchen, banging drawers open and shut. “It’s okay, sweetheart,” Sam says, crawling his way to Annie. “You’re going to be fine.” He gently pushes back the hair from her face. “We’re both going to be fine.”
Sam sees it then: a pool of blood spreading from under her head. “Albert, call an ambulance!” he screams. “Call an ambulance. NOW.”
The kitchen is silent. Albert reappears in the doorway, his jaw trembling. “I can’t do it, Sam.”
“That’s fine, Albert, I can. Give me her phone,” Sam says. “Come on, man.” Tears slide down his cheeks. “Give me Annie’s phone so I can get her help.”
Albert spots the blood spreading from under Annie’s head. “Look what I’ve done.” Covering his face with his hands, he starts to weep.