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NINA KIRIKI HOFFMAN 

HAUNTED HUMANS 

ONE 

Dorothy jean demain, presently known as Dorothy Jean Hand, sometimes called 
Dot 
by people who didn't know her and almost always D.J. by those who did, gripped 
the phone handset between her ear and shoulder. Her right hand held a pen 
poised 
over a carbonless message pad; her left hand sorted the Mental Healing 
Center's 
mail. The four office hours following Friday's lunch break stretched ahead, 
aggravated by dealing with the operator who had picked up when D.J. rang the 
answering service. 

"Sandy, have you checked account 551 for me yet?" D.J. said as patiently as 
she 
could, breaking in on two minutes of inane chatter. 

She listened to Sandy splutter through a message for Dr. Arlene Bollings, 
D.J.'s 
boss, managing to extract relevant information with great difficulty. She was 
just about to demand the phone number of the person leaving the message when 
Sandy broke in with, "Uh, but-- hey, Dot, there's a message here for you, 
too." 

"Let's finish with the first one, please." D.J. could hear her voice 
tightening. 
She wanted to grab Sandy and shake the information out of her like salt. But 
she 
was in secretary mode right now, level, efficient, no matter what the 
circumstances. She hunched her shoulders, then took a calming breath. 

"But the one for you is creepy." Sandy's voice was high, her words slow. D.J. 
wondered what she looked like; all she could tell was that Sandy chewed gum 
loudly and snappingly, and occasionally smoked; the small sucked intakes of 
breath were a giveaway. 

"I still need the phone number on this one, Sandy." Sandy had purged vital 
information from the files without communicating it before. D.J. had learned 
the 
hard way to persist with her. 

After three tries, Sandy managed to tell her the phone number. D.J. wrote, 
sighed, and said, "Is that it for this message?" 

"Yeah, I guess. There's one from that psycho nutcase Dr. Kabukin's seeing--" 

D.J. resisted an urge to ask just which psycho nutcase. Dr. Kabukin handled 
therapy cases, while Dr. Bollings did divorce, custody, and criminal 
evaluations 
for the courts. D.J. generally liked Dr. Kabukin's patients better. Most of 
them 
were interested in changing. Most of Dr. Bollings' patients were interested in 
fooling the doctor.

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"-- a couple real boring messages for the other doctors, and then this one for 
you. It's pretty weird, Dot." 

"Why don't you read it to me? And get it over with? D.J. poised her pen at the 
top of the next message blank, wondering if Sandy would communicate any of the 
information in order. 

"To, uh, Dorothy Jean, from Chase. Do you suppose that's a first or a last 
name?" 

To stop her hand from shaking, D.J. pressed the pen down on the message form 
so 
hard it punched through several sheets. "Go on." 

"There's, like, no number. It just says, 'You know what I need and I'm coming 
to 
get it.' Don't you think that's weird?" 

D.J. said nothing. 

"Well, I do. Kind of creepy. Did you get that? 'You know what I need and I'm 
coming to get it.' Dot, you still there? Darn, I bet she hung up. Why do 
people 
always hang up on me?" 

Deciding to take this as a suggestion, D.J. quietly lowered the phone's 
handset 
until it clicked into the cradle. Chase? It couldn't be Chase. She stared over 
the four-foot-high divider that separated her desk and computer hutch from the 
office waiting room, her gaze finally settling on the crystal vase of Double 
Delight roses Dr. Kabukin had brought in that morning and set among the 
magazines and self-help books on the glass-topped table between the two 
blue-and-white striped couches. Look how pink and white the roses are, D.J. 
thought, just like a baby, perhaps, or the hopes of a young girl on her 
wedding 
night. 

From the white walls, colorful abstract pictures glowed in the sun slanting 
through the picture window. Leftover Oregon raindrops glistened on the lawn 
out 
front. Everything in D.J.'s view looked cool and clean and calm. Untouched 
tranquility, like her life before Chase. 

She shuddered and lifted the phone again. For a moment she closed her eyes 
tight, concentrating on crashing all the thoughts she didn't want to 
entertain. 
She pressed autodial for the answering service, and smiled down at the message 
pad when Poppy picked up. 

"Account 551, please," D.J. said, and took the rest of the messages without a 
hitch. 

Morgan Hesch sat on one of the puffy striped couches in the Mental Healing 
Center waiting room and stared at the bits of dirt he'd tracked on the white 
speckled rug. Why did they have a lawn out front if they wanted to keep the 
rug 
clean? Well, yeah, there was a brick walk that wound across the lawn, but what 
if you were coming from the other direction? And the lawn was green and 
healthy, 
but there were those flower beds. Somebody must rake the edges all the time to

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make the dirt look so -- so clean. Like nothing had ever stepped on it since 
the 
dawn of time. Morgan hated that kind of clean. If blackboards were bare in his 
college classes when he got there, he always chalked something on them before 
he 
sat down. If the dirt were blank he just had to put a footprint in it. If 
things 
were wide open, any force, good or evil, could enter and control them. 

So the floor was no longer blank, either, not peppered with those chunks of 
earth that had fallen out of the waffle-stomper soles of his hiking boots. 
Morgan looked at the bits of squared dirt and slid his left hand in between 
the 
third and fourth buttons on his shirt, hiding it against his chest. One of his 
insiders, Shadow, always wanted to hide Morgan's hands. 

"Miss Deej?" Morgan said, his knees knocking against each other, not because 
he 
was cold, just to be doing something. 

He could only see the top of her head over the wall that hid the desk from him 
and everybody else. She had messy frizzy brown hair that she parted in the 
middle. He watched the part lean back until he could see Deej's eyes, green 
like 
the devil's, over the divider as she looked at him. 

"Yes, Morgan," she said. One of her better voices. Not the first-time-&phone 
voice which said, I'm-here-to-help,-don't bother-to-know-I'm-human. Definitely 
not the I-can't-have-a-relationship-with-you-because-it-wouldn't-be-prof 
essional voice. She'd given up on that one after he'd been seeing Dr. Dara 
Kabukin for two months. Not the don't-bother-me-I'm-in-the-middle-of-something 
voice, and not the okay,-okay-yes-I-guess-I-can-look-up voice. More of a 
I-don't-know-what-I'm-doing-but-I'm-glad-for-a-distraction voice. Actually he 
didn't think he'd ever heard her use this one before. 

Morgan figured Deej must have insiders since she had lots of voices like he 
did. 
Also, she was one of the few people who could recognize his insiders just by 
the 
way they talked. Even Dr. Dara got confused sometimes, but Deej always knew 
who 
was talking if it was anybody she'd ever talked to before. Timmy liked to play 
tricks on Deej, but even he was happy when the tricks didn't work. Morgan 
wondered if Deej had ever thought about being a doctor. Even though her hair 
was 
messy and she had the devil's eyes, he might go see her if she was a doctor. 

"I'm thirsty," he said. 

"Would you like some water?" 

"Yes, please. And paper? Pencil?" The voice that asked the last part belonged 
to 
the newest insider, who wasn't used to using Morgan's vocal cords and wasn't 
supposed to talk until Morgan had gotten to know him, anyway. The new 
insider's 
voice hadn't sorted itself out yet; it sounded a lot like Morgan. 

Deej stood up so he could see about a third of her, the top third. She was 
wearing a blue and white shirt, and some little bits of color on her lips,

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just 
the outside edges. Mostly if she had any color on her lips it was all over 
them. 

Today was not like other days. 

She held out some white paper and a pencil with a blunt tip. After he took the 
things from her, she headed into the other room, the one with the sink and the 
little baby fridge and the table where you took tests. 

The new insider was clamoring to get its hands on the paper and pencil. 
Morgan's 
appointment with Dr. Dara wouldn't start for another fifteen minutes. Morgan 
asked this anxious new insider if fifteen minutes would be enough, and the 
insider said he'd do what he could, if it was okay with Morgan. Sure, said 
Morgan. He sat back and let go of his hands. The insider used the left hand to 
draw a picture real fast of a man's face. The man had dark thick eyebrows and 
shadowy eyes and his mouth was wide but it sure wasn't smiling. What 
interested 
Morgan as he watched the picture form in front of him was that it looked like 
a 
photograph, with gray places under the nose and eyebrows, like parts of the 
face 
stuck right out of the paper and had shadows. He had never drawn anything like 
this before. 

He finished. Deej brought him a cup with water in it, then looked at his 
picture 
without asking and dropped the water. The water splashed on Deej's sandals. 
Some 
hit Morgan's hiking boots, but most of it hit the rug. 

"Miss Deej," said Morgan. 

"Ah, ah, ah, oh, I'm sorry, Morgan," she said, breathing like a dog on a hot 
day. "I'll get you another." 

"Miss Deej, you having a seizure?" he asked. 

"Well, maybe, yes, maybe," she said, and ran into the sink-fridge-test room. 

Today was definitely not like other days. Morgan had never seen Deej upset 
before. 

When she came back, she handed him the water without spilling any and said, 
"Morgan, who is that a picture of?" 

"I don't know. One of the insiders did it." 

"Which insider?" 

"Now, Miss Deej," said Clift, "you know it would be unprofessional of us to 
discuss our case with the secretary." 

"Oh, come on, Clift," said Deej. "I'm not asking you for a diagnosis or even 
intimate personal details. I was just wondering which one of you did it." 

Clift thought that over, and said, "Well, the truth is, Miss Deej, we can't 
tell 
you which insider. Somebody new is all we know."

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"Do you know who the man in the picture is?" 

"Do you?" asked Mishka in her little baby girl voice. She thought it was a 
game. 
She was three and thought most things were games. 

"Do you?" Deej repeated. 

"I asked you first," said Mishka. 

"I asked you second, and two is bigger than one." 

"Well, I don't know," Mishka said, but at the same time the left hand was 
writing something on the piece of paper. Morgan looked down. "Chase Kennedy," 
the words said. 

Deej put her hands over her mouth. Her eyes got wide. 

"Somebody you know?" Saul asked, with an ugly edge to his tone. Saul was mean 
to 
everybody. Morgan didn't like it when Saul took the voice because he made 
people 
not like Morgan. 

"Somebody you know?" Deej said, right back. She'd met Saul before and she 
still 
liked Morgan. One of the few. 

"No," said Saul. 

"How could you draw a picture of somebody you don't know? Did you see his 
picture in a magazine or something?" 

"There are some things mankind was not meant to know," said the Shadow in his 
creepy echoey voice. 

"How about woman kind?" asked Deej, but just then the phone rang and she 
disappeared back behind her desk. Her voice turned into the polite-to-company 
voice she always used on the phone as she said, "Good afternoon, Mental 
Healing 
Center, may I help you?" 

Dr. Dara came out of the door to the back hallway, smiling and leading a young 
fat woman toward the door to outside. "All right, Elena, same time next week?" 
she said, her voice faintly accented. Only two of the insiders had accents 
that 
Morgan could hear, and they were Valerie, the Southern one, and Saul, who was 
from New Jersey. The rest of his insiders sounded pretty much like people on 
TV. 
Dr. Dara was from somewhere else. England? England, even though she had narrow 
black eyes and totally black hair like people from Japan. 

The fat woman stared at the floor, mumbled something, glanced up quickly at 
Dr. 
Dara and then away again. Morgan remembered being like that when he first 
started seeing the doctor, not being able to look anybody in the eye, not 
being 
able to talk clearly, not wanting anybody to look at him. When the insiders 
had

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first come, they made him do things and he was in trouble all the time because 
of them and he couldn't get them to cooperate. Even though it was his body, 
they 
didn't listen to him. Not till Clift came, and started getting everybody to 
work 
as a team. Morgan studied the patient. She wore a big ugly navy-blue dress, 
and 
a belt that cut into her middle, and her hair was heavy and tangled, her face 
greasy, with little sores on it. 

Mishka felt sorry for her and said, "Bye bye. Bye bye." 

The fat woman looked at him like she was scared, which probably wasn't what 
Mishka meant to happen. Mishka wasn't very good at figuring out how people 
would 
feel about what she did. The others tried to talk her out of taking control 
without asking, but she had these impulses all the time and you couldn't watch 
out for them twenty-six hours a day. Morgan shrugged. "Sorry," he said. Then 
he 
gave speech number six, one Dr. Dara had drilled him on for several weeks: 
"Didn't mean anything by it. Have a nice day." 

"Thanks," said the fat woman, trying to smile and frowning instead. 

"Take care, Elena," Dr. Dara said, escorting her out the door. She sighed as 
she 
shut the door behind the woman, then turned. Every hair was in place -- Clift 
sometimes called Dr. Dara "Helmet-head" -- and her lipstick was bright and 
even. 
She smiled. "Morgan," she said. 

"She's a new one, right?" 

"Absolutely new. You were very good, Morgan. Come on back to the office. What 
have you drawn today? Who did it?" 

"It's a picture for Miss Deej," Morgan said. "A guy named Campbell did it." 

Deej stared at him. 

"He just told me, Deej. I didn't know before, honest. Gary Campbell." 

"Gary?" said Deej, her voice high and little like Mishka's. Definitely Morgan 
and Deej had something in common. Morgan wondered what she would say if he 
asked 
her for a date. He had the impression that people in the office weren't 
supposed 
to date patients. 

The new insider, Gary, was trying to get a word out. Morgan thought that was 
pretty pushy for somebody who'd just come to him, so he and Clift squashed the 
guy down. "Wait your turn, Gary," Morgan said, but he handed the picture to 
Deej. 

"Thanks," she said, still in that little high voice. 

"I like you, Miss Deej," Morgan said, figuring that would be something she'd 
remember he had said until he finished talking to Dr. Dara, and then he might 
ask Deej about the date idea.

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"Come on, Morgan," said Dr. Dara. 

As Morgan followed Dr. Dara back into her office, Clift came out. "Let's not 
discuss integration today, Doctor, all right? You know we're not a true 
multiple, and I think integration would be bad for Morgan. If anything, he 
needs 
to build himself up at the expense of the rest of us. He's still too wide 
open. 
Imagine us picking up another one. I can't seem to convince him to close the 
door. You get him started thinking he can work us in here with him and he'll 
start accepting any damn Tom, Dick, or Mary that comes along and knocks." 

"What topic would you suggest, Clift?" asked Dr. Dara. 

"We definitely, definitely, need more work on socialization. That speech 
worked 
-- wasn't that great? We've said that about six times in the correct context 
since last week, and Morgan's finally starting to believe it works. I tell him 
things and tell him things and he just doesn't pay attention, but when you 
tell 
him, he actually listens." 

"Well, yes, that is my function, Clift. Let me just check with Morgan, see if 
he's got an agenda for this afternoon, all right?" 

"Okay," said Clift grumpily and subsided. 

"Did you find the tape in the dictaphone?" Dr. Bollings asked D.J. as D.J. 
handed her a stack of message slips and opened and sorted mail. 

"Oh," D.J. said. With the picture Morgan had drawn in front of her, she had 
trouble concentrating on work at all. She turned the picture face down and 
forced all her thoughts about Chase away. She had a lot of practice ditching 
thoughts of Chase, but she knew she would have to think hard about him soon. 
This was just too weird. Something must have happened. She needed to find and 
read some recent newspapers, though she had been avoiding news in the three 
years since the trial. "It's been such a madhouse I haven't gone into your 
office since lunchtime. Is the tape long? I'll stay till I finish typing it." 

"Just a few letters, but they should go out today." 

"I'll get right on it." She got the tape out of Dr. Bollings' dictaphone, 
plugged it into her own, rewound it, started the computer, macro'd up the 
letter 
format, and began typing, putting her brain on auto. 

Dear Dr. Kennedy: 

 * 
I was pleased to receive your recent inquiry regarding office space. 
Regrettably, I must tell you that our last vacancy was filled a month ago. If 
I 
can be of any help to you in recommending other local office facilities, 
please 
do not hesitate to contact me. 

Sincerely, 

Arlene Bollings, Ph.D.

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The tape went on: "Oh, D.J., would you look up that address? It's on the 
envelope in the out basket." 

Damn, thought D.J., I was in such a hurry to get the tape I forgot to check 
the 
out basket. Just then Dr. Bollings came out of her office with a handful of 
papers and gave them to D.J. 

"Thanks, Boss," D.J. said and sighed. 

"You're in some kind of mood today, aren't you?" asked Dr. Bollings. "What was 
your first clue?" 

The doctor just smiled. "Lucky the schedule's light today. Rest up over the 
weekend. I've got five reports to dictate, and I plan to spend a lot of 
Saturday 
over a hot mike, so you'll have plenty to do on Monday." 

"Promises, promises," said D.J. She sorted through the stack of papers, found 
the letter and envelope from Dr. Kennedy on the bottom of the pile. 

D.J. put the letter on the copystand next to her keyboard and positioned the 
cursor a line below the date so she could type in the address. Dr. Chase 
Kennedy, Ph.D. 

"Arlene!" D.J. cried. 

TWO 

D.J.'S LANDLADY AFRA was watering the dwarf dahlias in the front planter at 
the 
Coat of Arms Apartments building when D.J. parked her six-year-old silver 
Tercel 
in the car port. D.J. groaned before she climbed out of the car and locked the 
door. Afra always wanted to talk, and D.J. was definitely not in the mood 
today. 

"You got plans for the weekend, hon, or you going to spend it holed up with 
the 
TV again like the last six weeks? Have you thought about getting some sun? 
You're so pasty!" Afra said as D.J. trudged up the concrete walk toward the 
front door. 

"Have you heard about UV?" D.J. said, then really wondered. Afra was who knew 
how old; her face was leathery and worn like any skin tanned by years of 
sunlight. 

"UV? Is that short for some new kind of perversion or drug? I have trouble 
keeping up with the kinds of mischief you youngsters get into anymore." 

"Uh, no, it's ultra-violet rays from the sun. They cause cancer." 

"Doesn't everything" Afra said. 

Before she could get started on another topic, D.J. said, "I've got to get 
inside and make dinner. I'm tired." 

"'Course you are, not enough fresh air, too much television, and improper 
nutrition." Afra waved her hand in a shooing motion. D.J. escaped. She checked 
her mailbox, afraid. She'd signed up here as D.J. Hand, and had paid to keep

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her 
number unlisted. But if Chase could track her to her job, he could track her 
to 
her home. 

The only thing in her mailbox was the fall catalog for Community Education. 
She 
carried it upstairs to her second floor apartment, feeling relieved when she 
had 
fastened the chain from the inside. 

Then she turned around to face her studio apartment and saw the writing on the 
wall. Red spraypaint, right across her Van Gogh and Rembrandt art prints. 
"Only 
you can purify me. Only through your blood will I be saved. 

She would never forget his handwriting. 

She had seen it in the love notes he'd left with flowers when he had courted 
her, four years ago. Later, she had seen his handwriting on the anonymous 
notes 
that the police found next to the corpses. She had seen it in the letters 
Chase 
wrote her from Death Row. 

Those letters had finally driven her to give up a paralegal position with a 
future in it at one of the big law firms in San Francisco and move north, to 
Spores Ferry, Oregon, a town of a hundred thousand, as small a place as she 
could live in and not go crazy, she figured. Gary Campbell, the first 
detective 
who had seriously listened to her when she mentioned her suspicions about her 
boyfriend to the task force, the one she had kept in contact with after the 
sentencing hearing, had told her she didn't even have to open the letters. 
Chase 
couldn't get her, he said. But she opened the letters. She had to. Finally she 
had run anyway. She hadn't left any forwarding address anywhere, not even with 
her mother. 

And maybe she had been right, and Gary had been wrong. Maybe Chase had been 
playing with her, through the trial, the sentencing hearing, even his going to 
jail for three years, just so he could come back and find her now, hidden as 
she 
was, ferreting out her job and her apartment and everything she had to cling 
to 
in her new existence. 

A knock sounded on her door. She jerked and gasped, dropping her mail and her 
purse. Her heart speeded. She looked around for anything she could use as a 
weapon, grabbed an antique umbrella she had picked up at a yard sale, and went 
to the door. 

Through the peep she saw Morgan's gaunt young face, his wispy black mustache. 
He 
had done something to his hair; instead of hanging lank and half over his 
face, 
it had height to it. Mousse? Gel? Morgan with fashion sense? A frightening 
thought. And he was standing up straight. Usually she saw him slouched on a 
couch. He was taller than she had thought. 

"You alone?" she asked through the door.

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"Deej, you know me better than that." 

She slipped the chain off and turned the locks. "I just got home," she said. 
"I 
wasn't expecting you for another hour." 

"Would you like me to go away for a while?" asked his fruitiest and most 
refined 
voice. 

"No, Clift; I was just explaining why I haven't had time to change. Actually, 
I'd like you to come in." 

Morgan blinked and stared. 

"Actually, I'm kind of scared right now." Her voice wobbled. She reached out 
and 
took his narrow hand, pulled him into the apartment. "Look." She pointed to 
the 
graffiti. 

"Messy," said Morgan in an approving voice. 

She looked sideways at him, this gawky college boy with his many voices, and 
thought, what a thin reed I'm leaning on. I should send him home and talk to 
the 
police. Tell them my history, ask them to find out whether Chase is still in 
jail or not. "Morgan, did you really ask Dr. Kabukin if it was all right for 
us 
to see each other?" 

"No," he said. 

"What? But you said--" 

"Sure," said Saul. "She would have told me to forget it, so I decided not to 
ask 
her. What do you think, lady, it's productive for a psycho to date his 
doctor's 
secretary? Jeeze, take a minute to think." 

"Wait a second. I'm not the doctor around here. How would I know? Besides, you 
lied to me." 

"Like no one's ever done that before?" Saul said, sneering. 

"Morgan never did before," said D.J. 

"How would you know?" Saul said. 

"Shut up, Saul," said Clift. "D.J.'s right. Morgan never lied to her before. 
Of 
course, this particular lie was hopelessly transparent. Why did you believe 
it? 
You could have checked with Dr. Dara before you said yes to us. Usually you're 
so efficient." 

"I--"

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"I doubt it's the body," Clift continued, holding out his arms and looking 
down 
at Morgan's slender frame. "I've been trying to get him interested in 
swimming, 
but one of the others died by drowning and won't go near water. Or is this a 
body type that appeals to you?" 

"No, I --" 

"Wait a minute," Clift said. "Wait. A. Minute. It's Gary, isn't it?" 

D.J. sighed and closed her eyes. 

"That prick?" Saul yelled. "You know he's a cop? We got a damned cop in here 
with us. Pushy rude bastard!" 

"D.J., is that the story? It's Gary you want to see?" Clift asked. "Was the 
picture that important?" 

"I'm sorry, Clift. Sorry, Morgan. I think I know . . . . " She couldn't 
believe 
what she was about to say. D.J. had never known quite what to make of Morgan 
and 
his many voices. Dr. Kabukin was not a slave to the Diagnostic and Statistical 
Manual of Mental Disorders the way Dr. Bollings was; she didn't diagnose her 
patients with number codes you could look up to identify their particular 
disorder. So D.J. didn't have a convenient label for Morgan. She just thought 
he 
was funny, and found several of his voices willing to play games with her, 
even 
though they also enjoyed irritating her. 

But Gary -- that was a different story. If Gary were Gary Campbell, the cop 
she 
had known in San Francisco . . . . How could she deny it? How could Morgan 
possibly know enough about her to draw a picture of Chase Kennedy out of the 
blue? The explanation she came up with was too silly to think about. But she 
had 
to think about it anyway. Maybe all the voices in Morgan were indeed different 
people. Maybe he was psychic and tuned in to all these other people, or maybe 
-- 

"Clift, are you a ghost?" 

"Why, D.J., you're the first person besides Morgan to come up with that 
explanation. I'm flattered." 

"Yes, but would you answer?" 

"And I've told Dr. Kabukin about that, too, but she continues to nurse her own 
pet theories. We do make progress, when she gives us ideas about how to handle 
society in a way that won't scare it, but when she tries to get us to consider 
getting together, one has to shudder." 

D.J. tried a different tack. "How did you die, Clift?" 

"In a ridiculously mundane fashion. A car crash. I had always hoped that I 
would 
irritate some rival intellectual into committing a fiendishly clever murder, 
but

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I didn't live long enough to achieve maximum irritation and my dream death. 
No, 
instead I was out driving to the university library one night when a drank in 
a 
big American car crossed the center line and plowed right into the side of my 
small Japanese car, crushing it and me between his grill and the wall of a 
bank. 
A savings and loan, if I recall correctly. At least there was a metaphor 
there." 

"What year was this?" 

"Two years ago." 

"Where?" 

"East Lansing. They're very into big American cars there. Did you know that a 
number of car makers have factories there?" 

"No," said D.J. "So how did you find Morgan?" 

"Well, I was frustrated about suffering such a meaningless death, so I didn't 
feel ready to shuffle off this mortal coil. On the other hand, haunting a 
sidewalk or an auto junkyard didn't fulfill my need for some kind of 
recognition 
either. I was drifting around aimlessly, trying to figure out what I could do 
in 
my powerless state when I felt this peculiar pull from the west, and thought 
what the hell. I gave in and found myself sucked right into Morgan's body. He 
was playing with a Ouija board at the time. Since I arrived I've tried to 
discourage him from engaging in this game, but he's not always amenable to 
direction. Worse, he doesn't seem to need the board anymore; random spirits 
just 
show up here and crowd in with the rest of us." 

D.J. bit her lower lip. She had found Clift the most reasonable of Morgan's 
voices, but just now she didn't know what to believe. 

"But, to bring us up to speed, we were talking about Gary, weren't we?" Clift 
said. 

She swallowed, and said, "I think I know Gary from when he was alive." 

"Really? I thought that was just an attention-getting device on his part, 
claiming he had something to tell you. When we get somebody new we usually try 
to gentle them down for a while before we let them play with the body. They 
can 
get us in a lot of trouble if we let them out unsupervised. When Saul first 
came, Morgan woke up in a bordello across a state line, and went into shock. 
He's never quite recovered from the mortification. He's awfully young, 
something 
Saul refuses to take into consideration. But if Gary was telling the truth . . 
. 
. May we sit down?" 

"What? Oh, sure, sure," said D.J., clearing a stack of books off a chair for 
him. She closed and locked the door, then said, "Would you like something to 
drink? I've got instant coffee or tea or lemonade." 

"No, thanks," said Clift. "We need a little quiet to thrash this out amongst

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ourselves. Excuse me, please." 

"Sure," said D.J. She went into the kitchen and poured herself a nip of 
brandy, 
swallowed it without tasting. She coughed as the warmth bit into her, then 
decided to put some water in the kettle for tea anyway. 

She was leaning on the counter, staring at the kettle and wondering if it 
would 
boil as she watched, when a new voice called to her from the living room/bed 
room/dining room. "Doro?" 

She straightened, gripping her elbows so hard she could feel her fingertips 
drilling in to her skin. After a moment and a couple of deep breaths she 
walked 
out into the living room and looked at Morgan. 

His eyes, usually a pale blue, looked darker, and his mouth wore a crooked 
smile 
she had never seen there before, but she had seen it. She had seen it. 

"Ain't this a bitch?" he said, and laughed, deep and low. 

"Gary," she whispered, chilled. 

"Poor bastard, lonely kid, just wants to make some friends, doesn't know how 
to 
talk to girls, invites in the wide world of spirits. Christ, Doro, never 
thought 
I'd see you again this way." 

"Gary," she said, clutching her elbows, her shoulders bunching higher. 

"Yes, well," he said, and tilted his head in a certain way, so that he was 
looking up at her from under his brows, "the world being as it is--Christ, 
Doro, 
what a world! -- I think we should talk about the case again." 

"Gary, how did you die?" 

"That's the point, isn't it? Chase has escaped." 

D.J. let out a scream just for the hell of it, releasing tension, then said, 
"Well, I kind of thought--" and pointed to the writing on the wall. "And he 
left 
messages for me at the office." 

Gary looked up and his eyes went wide. "God, Doro! Get out of here!" "Without 
a 
game plan? Let's think this through first." 

"He knows where you live! Go somewhere else immediately." 

"Oh, come on. I don't want to run around like a headless chicken. Let me pack 
a 
few things, and get my credit card and my bank numbers and like that." 

"All those things can be traced. Ditch them." 

"That doesn't make any sense. How could Chase trace my credit card and my

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

bank?" 

"You asked how I died. He came for me as soon as he escaped, and --" He closed 
his eyes, masked his face with his hands, and said in a low voice, very 
quickly, 
"tortured me to find out where you were, and killed me." 

D.J. hesitated. She looked away. "You knew where I was?" 

He sighed. He looked at her. "I shouldn't have, but I wanted to keep track of 
you. Followed the transfer of ownership on your car through the DMV. I knew 
your 
new name and your p.o. box number, the town." He paused, grabbed breath, 
looked 
away from her. "He -- Doro -- he -- I didn't want to tell." He pressed his 
mouth 
shut, then looked up at her from under his brows. "I couldn't stop myself from 
saying it. I couldn't stop myself." He closed his eyes tight and thunked fists 
on his head. 

She let go of herself and gripped his fists. Tears spill ed down her face. 
"I'm 
sorry," she whispered. 

"Yes, well, there's no going back, and time is running past us. Pack what you 
need and let's get out of here." 

"Okay." She got her big duffel out of the closet and began throwing clothes 
into 
it. 

"Can I help?" asked Morgan, the Gary look in his face gone, his voice scared. 

"Sure," she said. She looked around, then grabbed one of her spare purses, a 
big 
one made of turquoise rip-stop nylon. "Why don't you go in the bathroom and 
put 
the stuff from the medicine cabinet in here? Thanks, Morgan. Thanks for 
everything." 

"Some date," he said, but he didn't sound unhappy. 

She smiled, then frowned as he disappeared. "Can you ask Gary if I should call 
the police about this?" she yelled. 

"Wait until you find a safe place to call from," Clift called back. 

D.J. did a swift job of packing all her favorite clothes and tucking important 
papers in her purse. 

"Here," said Morgan, coming out of the bathroom with a bulging purse. Without 
pausing for breath, Gary's voice came out: "He's probably watching the 
building 
right now, and for sure he'll follow your car, especially if he sees you 
carrying luggage. I bet he's out there waiting to find out how you've reacted 
to 
the note. What does he know so far? No police have showed up, not much of an 
outcry. Maybe he thinks you're too spooked to do anything about it. Maybe he's 
coming in to get you right now."

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

"He doesn't know about you, though." 

"We can't know that for sure. I mean, he can't know about me, Gary, but he 
might 
know about Morgan; he knows where you work. Can we stash your stuff away from 
the apartment? That way someone could pick it up later without tipping him by 
going into your apartment." 

"I have storage space in the basement." 

"After that we can drive to a public place and catch other transportation," 
Gary 
said. "We should be able to evade him long enough to get you some protection." 

With Morgan acting as scout, D.J. carried her things down to the basement, 
which 
had an in-building access stairway, and put them in her storage space, 
pondering 
whether to padlock them in or not. She had never had anything disturbed in the 
basement. On the other hand, if Chase were here-- he had made a science out of 
sneaking into places where people lived and studying them, while people were 
present and asleep. Wanting to study people's lifestyles was one curiosity he 
hadn't bothered to hide from D.J. when their relationship was most intense. 
His 
favorite movie was Alfred Hitchcock's Rear Window. "Just the little bits of 
life 
he sees, don't you love it? All those stories lying there unveiled. You can 
learn so much by walking around at night and looking in through windows." 

She stared at her storage space and shuddered. Nothing could keep him from 
pawing through the skins of her new life. She closed the door and fastened the 
padlock. 

Like a padlock would stop him, any more than her locked apartment door had. 

"So where should we go?" she asked, turning toward Morgan, who was standing a 
few feet away. 

At the top of the basement stairs, a man stood backlit by daylight. 

THREE 

D.J. gripped Morgan's arm and drew him quietly back toward her. Though there 
was 
a light on in the basement, it was dim compared with the daylight coming in 
through the building's back door. There was a chance Chase hadn't seen that 
Morgan was down here. 

"Yes," said that thrilling rich voice, Chase's voice, that once had fueled her 
fantasies and later haunted her nightmares, "where should we go?" 

D.J. looked around for anything that would serve as a weapon. There was some 
community property scattered around the common area between the storage 
closets, 
things nobody really wanted but had neglected to throw out. She found a 
dead-headed mop and gripped it with both hands. 

His voice sank to a near whisper, curling its way down the stairs. "If you had 
a 
choice, where would you go? I want you on my altar, Dorothy Jean. I need you

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

to 
be my sacrament this time. Only you can give me last rites." 

"Young man!" Afra's voice came from somewhere beyond Chase. "Do you have 
legitimate business in my building? If not, I'll have to ask you to leave." 

The shadowed head looked up, away; and then he was gone, his footsteps 
pounding 
down the hallway toward the back door of the building. 

Finally D.J. let the trembling take her, now that the immediate danger was 
gone. 
Her shoulders shook, but her hands were locked around the mop-stick. Breathing 
fast, she glanced at Morgan, saw that he had moved into the shadow of one of 
the 
storage cabinets and was holding a splintery baseball bat over his shoulder. 
Something about his expression told her Gary was the one behind the eyes. 

"D.J.? You down there? What was that all about? Some young hooligan making an 
obscene phone call in person?" 

At last D.J. drew in a deep breath and lowered the mop. "Afra. Afra. Oh, 
Afra," 
she said, her voice quavering. She walked toward the steps and looked up. 
"Thanks, Afra." 

"For what? I did wonder if it was exactly an appropriate moment to bring out 
my 
hand-gun, but the way things are these days, I thought it better to be safe." 

"Much better," D.J. said, climbing the stairs. Morgan followed her. They both 
held onto their makeshift weapons. "I have to tell you about him." She glanced 
down the hall toward the back door, which was still open. She and Morgan ran 
to 
look out, heard a car engine growling around a corner, gone beyond sight. 

"Sounds like a beetle," said Saul. 

"You know cars?" D.J. asked. 

"Any amateur can tell a beetle," Saul said, "but as a matter of fact, yes, I 
know cars. One of the few things that kept my interest before I jumped off 
that 
bridge in Jersey." 

"What's all the fuss about? Who's your young man, D.J?" Afra said. She was, 
indeed, holding a large revolver, barrel pointed floorward. "I never heard him 
come in. And I was keeping an ear out." 

"Afra, this is Morgan, a friend from work. Morgan, this is Afra, my landlady. 
Can we go to your apartment? I've got to tell you about that man." 

"You vouch for this rude young man?" 

D.J. glanced at Morgan. "Oh, yes, Afra. He has rough edges, but he's really 
very 
sweet." 

Morgan's eyes widened. She knew it was Morgan inside, and that relieved her. 
She

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

didn't want Saul talking to Afra. 

"All right," said Afra. She still looked suspicious. "Come on in." They 
followed 
her into her apartment. Inside, every flat surface that wasn't designed for 
people to sit or walk on bore treasures from the sea: twisted driftwood, 
sand-scoured glass, a crab carapace, bowls of water with shining rocks lining 
the bottom, fragments of sand dollars and shells, gull feathers. The air 
smelled 
salty. 

"Have a seat. I'll bring you some tea," said Afra, disappearing into the 
kitchen. 

D.J. sat on the couch and tried to figure out how to frame an explanation. 

Morgan flopped down beside her, turned on his side so he could watch her. 
"Miss 
Deej?" he said. 

"Morgan," she said. She smiled at him. 

"You really think I'm sweet?" 

"You are sweet." 

"Not just because of Clift and Gary and Mishka and Shadow and Elaine and Saul 
and Timmy and Valerie?" 

Elaine? Valerie? thought D.J., but aloud, she said, "Just because of you." 

"Wow," he said. "Nobody ever said anything like that about me. No girl ever 
said 
anything nice about me before." 

"Really? Not even the ones inside you?" 

"Well," he said, and frowned. "But that's different. It's not like they have a 
choice." 

"Oh, Sweetie," said a new voice from Morgan that D.J. hadn't heard before, a 
rich husky female voice, "we've got a choice, all right. We could be insulting 
you all the time; but Deej is right. You are sweet." 

"Wow," said Morgan. He lay back and stared at the ceiling. 

"Who were you talking to?" Afra asked, coming in with a tea tray, a Japanese 
tea 
pot and three small handle-less cups. 

"Morgan does impressions," D.J. said. 

"Really? Who was that supposed to be? Lauren Bacall?" 

"They're not famous people," Morgan said, "just people I know." 

"Odd," said Afra. "How could you take an act like that on the road?" 

"Dr. Dara says it's more like they're different parts of me, or, like, I 
choose

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

a different voice to express different things." 

"D.J. Bubbe," said Afra. "A friend from work?" 

"That's not important right now," D.J. said. "What's important is that I have 
to 
leave the building, because that guy you chased off knows I live here. He's 
looking for me. He wants to kill me. He's already killed four other people, 
Afra. You've been trying to find out about my past, well, here it is. His 
name's 
Chase Kennedy. Do you remember the case? He was my boyfriend in my other life, 
and while he was romancing me, he was murdering other women. I worked with the 
police to catch and convict him. He was on Death Row last I heard, but today, 
I 
got messages from him at work, and when I came home, I found a message from 
him 
there, and Morgan was just helping me move out when he showed up and you got 
rid 
of him. I've got to find someplace to hide." 

"Are you serious?" Afra asked. 

D.J. stared at her. 

Afra said, "He scared off awfully easy." 

"He likes being alone with his victims. It's one of his things. Besides, that 
was a pretty big gun you had." 

Afra poured tea. Morgan sat up and accepted a cup. D.J. accepted a cup too, 
and 
watched her hostess. After they had sipped in silence for a little while, Afra 
said, "You're thinking about this wrong. Better if you fort up here, get your 
protection, keep a vigil; call the police. They could watch outside, catch him 
trying to get in. There you are. No running and hiding. A running target's a 
lot 
more vulnerable than somebody who chooses her own ground." 

D.J. looked at Morgan, wondering if Gary had two cents he'd like to toss in at 
this point. 

"If you'll sit there with that gun in your lap, I'll watch out the front 
window 
while Doro calls the police," said Gary. "Good thing it's still light." 

Afra's eyebrows lowered at this new voice from Morgan, but she set down her 
cup 
and retrieved the gun from a drawer by the front door. 

"Phone's over there," said Afra, pointing toward the kitchen. 

"Gary, you know anyone up here?" D.J. asked, heading for the phone. 

"I don't think so." 

Afra said, "How come you introduced this boy as Morgan and now you're calling 
him Gary?" 

"Morgan has a different name for each voice, Afra. I know it sounds weird, but 
.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

. . . "There was no way D.J. could explain this sensibly. Frowning, she paged 
through Afra's phone book until she found a non-emergency number for the 
police 
and dialed. 

A woman answered. D.J. pulled herself together. "Hi. I was wondering if you 
could help me. I think someone's trying to kill me." 

The woman listened while D.J. ran the story past her. The woman said someone 
would be over to check the handwriting on the wall soon. 

D.J. hung up and felt despair. How could anybody take her seriously? "Did that 
sound convincing?" she asked Morgan, wondering if Gary was still in the 
forefront. 

He was. "Don't worry. They should check everything, no matter how strange it 
sounds. Especially in a community like this one, where there probably isn't a 
lot going on. You won't have to talk them into it. The evidence will." 

D.J. replaced the phone book on the lower shelf of the phone stand. "I sure 
hope 
so." She tried to compare herself with people she had observed when they came 
to 
be evaluated by Dr. Bollings. No, she wasn't hysterical or tangential; her 
orientation as to time and place were good; she didn't sound irrational. Of 
course, some of the most coherent-sounding people turned out to be the really 
disturbed ones. Maybe her affect was too flat. Maybe she should have talked 
faster. 

But really, the situation was absurd. 

She remembered the stab of terror she had felt when Chase's voice came from 
the 
shadow at the top of the stairs, and she sank down slowly and smoothly until 
she 
was sprawled on Afra's rug. He was here. He was coming for her. He had killed 
before. Even Gary hadn't been able to stop him. Nobody knew where he was. 

She lay immobilized for a while, her gaze fixed on a water stain on the 
ceiling 
that looked like a skull. Her hands and feet felt as if they were miles away, 
and she couldn't seem to move them. 

Sounds came through the cotton over her ears, but for a time she didn't sort 
them out. A hand touched her shoulder and she jerked, then lay still. A head 
interrupted her focus on the ceiling. Young face, Fu Manchu mustache, wide 
worried blue eyes. "Deej? Miss Deej?" the mouth said. 

She blinked and noticed that she was breathing. 

Afra's face appeared beside Morgan's. "Child? Child, are you all right?" 

D.J. brought a hand up, rubbed it over her face. "What happened?" she said. 

"You kind of fainted," said Morgan, his brows pinched together above the 
bridge 
of his nose. "I never seen a girl do that before." 

D.J. closed her eyes and tried to reconcile this with her own image of 
herself.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

It was hard. "Sorry," she said. 

"Good Lord," said Afra, "if anyone ever had an excuse to faint, you do." 

"I thought people only fainted because of bad corsets," D.J. said, and tried 
to 
sit up. Morgan put a hand under her elbow and helped her. "Thanks," she said, 
looking at him. Saul's sneer lifted the comer of his mouth, but his eyes 
looked 
kind. 

A knock sounded on the door, and Afra went over to let a uniformed policeman 
in. 
With Saul's help, D.J. struggled to her feet. She looked at him and smiled. He 
smirked back and pinched her rear. 

"You're such a shmuck," she whispered. 

"So they say," he whispered back, and slid an arm around her waist. "Put your 
arm around my shoulders and I'll help you over to the couch." 

Furious, she obeyed him. As he let her down on the couch, his hand strayed up 
to 
feel her breast so quickly no one could have noticed it except the two of 
them. 
"Stop it," she whispered through clenched teeth as he sat down beside her, 
still 
smirking. "Think what you're teaching Morgan." 

"Exactly," he whispered. "Kid's way too passive." 

Afra brought the policeman over. "This is Officer Vance," she said. "Can you 
talk to him, D.J.?" 

D.J. rubbed her eyes, licked her lips. "I guess," she said. When she lowered 
her 
hands to her lap, Morgan took one and squeezed it just a little. Glancing at 
his 
profile, she couldn't tell who he was. His grip was warm and firm, so probably 
not Morgan. Even if it was that asshole Saul, she decided, it felt better to 
have someone hold her hand than to be alone with this. She suspected that Saul 
was supportive under his abrasive behavior. 

Of course, she'd been wrong about a man before. 

Still, she held onto his hand and looked at the officer. 

Officer Vance was young and sandy-haired, and had a sad long face that made 
him 
look as if he belonged in a British comedy: wide blue eyes, long nose, long 
chin. He took out a notebook. 

She told him about the messages at the office, the letter Dr. Bollings had 
received, the spray-paint upstairs. "I'll never forget his handwriting. And 
then 
we saw him." 

"What?" His wide eyes went wider. 

"He was here in the building. He cornered me and Morgan in the basement, but

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Afra drove him out with a gun. Then we came in here and called you." 

"You didn't tell the dispatcher you'd made visual contact with the subject," 
said Officer Vance. 

"Didn't I? I . . . was having kind of a delayed reaction, I guess." 

"She fainted after she hung up the phone," Morgan said. 

"Mrs. Griffin, did you see this man?" 

"I certainly did," said Afra. "Saw and heard him. Talking trash to D.J. down 
the 
stairwell, nasty stuff, like religion only twisted." 

"Can you describe him?" 

"A tall fella with a good pair of shoulders on him, at least six feet high, 
maybe more. He had short dark hair, thick black eyebrows, kind of a narrow 
face 
with hollows under the cheekbones. Big hands. He was wearing a green coat that 
covered up his other clothes, but he had leather shoes, not tennis shoes or 
whatever they call those things that come in those lurid shades. And he ran 
away 
right quick when he saw my gun." 

"Your gun?" 

Afra got her gun out of the drawer again. The officer made a note. 

"Have a sniff," Afra said. "Haven't fired it since my nephew took me target 
shooting six years ago." 

Officer Vance duly sniffed the barrel and handed the gun back to her. "Exactly 
why did you bring the gun out in the first place?" 

"Well, I've got a responsibility to my tenants. I keep track of most things 
that 
go on here. I had a very bad feeling about that young fella. He waltzed right 
in 
here without so much as a by-your-leave, climbed the stairs, came clattering 
back down, headed for the basement just like he knew where it was. I don't 
know. 
My alarms just went off." 

"Do you pull your gun often?" 

"First time since about three years ago. There was a squabble in one of the 
apartments. A man was whaling on his wife, and she was screaming. I called the 
police, but they didn't come fast enough to suit me, so I went up there and 
showed him my gun and told him to git. Which he did. And of course she got 
right 
after him; they left together the next week." She looked at the policeman. 
"It's 
not like I wave this thing around promiscuously. Just when I need to." 

"I see," he said drily. "All right, I think I'm ready to go look at the 
apartment." 

Morgan stood and tugged D.J. to her feet. "Ready for this?" he whispered. He

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

wore Saul's sneer again. 

She felt angry. She wasn't sure Morgan could control his ghosts, but she 
thought, from what Clift had said earlier, that Morgan had some say in who was 
acting. Why was he siccing Saul on her? Clift, Gary, Morgan, any of the rest 
of 
them would have been better, even Mishka or Shadow. 

Saul's smile widened. "Yeah, give it to me, baby," he whispered, his hand 
squeezing hers with steady on-and-off pressure, thumb pressing into her palm, 
a 
stand-in for sex, his leer told her. 

"Not now!" she muttered, jerking her hand out of his and stalking around the 
table to the door. She led the officer and Afra and Morgan upstairs, then 
fumbled for her key, realized she had left her purse in the basement, had 
dropped it when she grabbed the mop. "Damn," she said. 

Morgan reached past her and tried the doorknob. It turned and the door opened. 

"Okay. From now on, don't touch anything else, all right?" said Officer Vance. 

Maybe there had been a perfect print on the doorknob, D.J. thought. Damn. She 
led Vance in and pointed to the red spraypaint. The message was still there. 
For 
a moment she had been afraid that it had disappeared and Vance would think the 
whole thing was some kind of moronic stunt. But it was still there: "Only you 
can purify me. Only through your blood will I be saved." Chase's sprawling 
bold 
"O"s and "I" pegged the phrases down. 

"What does it mean to you, Ms. Hand?" Vance asked. 

"I --" Chase had a magic chant that came out of him when the lovemaking was at 
its most intense. D.J. had never had a traditional religious upbringing, so 
she 
wasn't sure exactly what the chant meant. When he said it she was usually 
pretty 
far gone into her own sensations, but now she remembered it: "You are my 
redemption, you are my savior, you renew me and cleanse me, through you I find 
the kingdom of heaven and I am born AGAIN, oh, oh, wash my sins away. . . . " 

Later she had thought about it even though she didn't want to. It reminded her 
of movies about the Catholic church: confession, then penance and -- 
absolution, 
was it? Chase had never confessed to anyone; but maybe he knew he'd done 
something wrong. Maybe he thought of D.J. as a cure for his badness. 

It had taken her more than a year to get over the nauseated feeling she got 
every time someone expressed even the slightest sexual interest in her. 

"I think it means he wants to kill me," D.J. said in a thin voice. "He never 
used to think about me as the-- the sacrifice, but I betrayed him . . . . I 
helped them put him away . . . . " 

Saul slipped his arm around her and pulled her up against him. She glared at 
him, her best melt-butter-at-five-paces sizzler, and he grinned and winked at 
her. 

Dimly she realized that she was never nauseated by Saul or even scared of him.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Only furious. She dug her elbow into his side, and he relaxed his grip but 
didn't let go of her. "I helped them put him away," she said in a stronger 
voice, anger underlying it. "And he should have stayed there. How did he get 
out?" 

"I can't go into detail," said Vance. "But he did escape. He's considered 
armed 
and extremely dangerous. Since he's found you here, it might be best if we 
took 
you into protective custody." 

"Yes," said Morgan, in Gary's voice. 

"I'm packed and ready," said D.J. She frowned. "Does this mean I can't go to 
work?" 

"He knows where you work." 

"Oh, yeah. Damn! I'll have to call my boss." 

Officer Vance said, "Is there anything else you can tell me about his habits 
that might lead us to him?" 

"He drives a Volkswagen bug," said Saul. "We heard it leaving after Afra 
chased 
him off." 

Vance's eyes narrowed. He studied Morgan for a moment, then shrugged. 
"Thanks." 
He turned to D.J. "Let's get your things." 

"They're in the basement." 

They left the apartment and headed downstairs again, Vance leading the way, 
followed by Afra, Morgan and D.J. in the rear. 

D.J. caught Morgan's arm and slowed him, letting the others get ahead of them. 
"How come you guys have been letting Saul maul me?" she whispered. 

"He makes you mad, and that's better than scared," muttered Clift. 

"Prick!" she whispered. 

For a second, Clift looked wounded, but then Saul came back, with his nasty 
grin. "Hey, baby," he murmured, "I know this body ain't much to look at, but I 
got techniques that could keep you happy." 

She felt heat in her cheeks. 

"You look great in red," he whispered and laid his hand on her blush. 

For a hot furious second she glared at him without moving away. Then something 
inside her crumbled and she stepped closer, putting her arms around him, 
pressing her face into his chest. He was crazy. He was haunted. He was 
probably 
very bad for her. Maybe she was really bad for him. Morgan was confused enough 
as it was without some kind of love life. 

And yet. In the midst of this crashing chaos, with whatever fragile recovery 
she'd made since leaving Chase threatening to tear apart, here was wavery

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Morgan, standing as stable as he could. Even Saul was comforting, in a 
perverse 
way. And almost exciting. Which made her want to tum in her enlightened 
woman's 
card and hide her face from anybody with self-respect. 

"Hon," murmured a woman's voice, tinted with a slight Southern accent and 
higher 
than the female voice D.J. had heard from Morgan before, "we can do this 
later. 
Maybe we should try not to be too weird right now." 

She let go of him and rubbed her eyes. "I -- I feel mixed up." 

"No wonder. I'm a bit of a blender myself, hon; can't imagine how I'd feel 
meeting somebody like us, but having that piled on top of this other --" 
Morgan 
pursed his lips and looked down toward the front hall, where Afra and Vance 
stood looking up. "Come on. Sort it out later." 

D.J. took his hand and headed down the stairs. 

FOUR 

They're monitoring everything. They said this call's okay, since I'm still at 
the police station. Officer Vance says if you can bring a dictaphone and the 
tapes and a computer to the station, they can get them to me. I don't know. 
You 
might just want to hire a temp." D.J. paused for breath. 

Dr. Bollings said, "I think that would probably be best. How are you holding 
up?" 

"Not too well," said D.J. She stared down at her lap. She was still wearing 
her 
office clothes, turquoise and silver shirt, black skin, dark stockings, black 
flats. Usually the first thing she did when she got home from work was change 
into jeans and a big loose shirt. "And-- Doc, I did something really stupid." 
She hesitated. 

"Yes?" said Dr. Bollings. 

"I made a date with one of Dr. Kabukin's patients. He said he checked it with 
her, but he told me later that was a lie." 

"Oh, Dorothy Jean!" 

"I realize it was stupid and probably a violation of office policy." 

"Absolutely. But I don't know if we've ever articulated that policy. Tacit 
understanding isn't the same as something written down." Silence. "Which 
patient?" 

D.J. squeezed her eyes shut. "Morgan," she said in a small voice. Of all 

Dara Kabukin's patients, Morgan was probably the most obviously askew. 

A sigh. 

D.J. looked up. Around her the business of the police station went on, people

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

working at desks, some bringing people in, others answering phones, leaving, 
talking with each other. No one was paying any attention to her. She stared at 
her skirt, at the black pleats. "Doc, I may be setting Morgan's progress back 
hundreds of years." 

"I'll let Dara know," Dr. Bollings said in a dry voice. 

"The more I know him, the more I like him," D.J. said. 

"For now, I think your seeing Morgan is contraindicated, at least until Dara 
has 
had a chance to meet with him and assess the effects of these developments." 

"I don't think I get to see anybody anyway," said D.J. "I'll try to call you 
again in a couple of days, if it's okay with the police." 

"Is there anything else I can do for you?" Dr. Bollings asked. 

"Just --" D.J. picked at the pleats in her skirt, staring down, trying to 
think. 
She couldn't think of anyone she wanted contacted, certainly not her mother; 
Afra knew, Gary knew; her other friends, people she had met at community 
choir, 
she didn't even know most of their last names or phone numbers. She would have 
to call the director and tell her she couldn't make it to rehearsal. "Tell Dr. 
Dara and Dr. Earl and Dr. Brad I won't be in?" 

"Surely," said Dr. Bollings. 

The next day crawled by. D.J. and a female detective named Rae stayed in a 
cheap 
hotel, where the odor of cigarette smoke clung to the orange drapes and 
bedspreads despite wide open windows, and all the light bulbs were 40 watts. 

"I hate waiting" D.J. said midway through the afternoon after numberless games 
of cards and Saturday morning cartoons. "Giving all my power over to him. 
Reacting instead of acting. Are people out there looking for him?" 

"You better believe it," said Rac. "Us and the Feds." 

"Have they found anything yet?" 

"Nothing substantial. We're circulating pictures, asking questions, following 
leads." 

Somewhat comforted, D.J. poured herself some coffee from the thermos on the 
dresser and sat down to play more cards. 

Too restless to sleep long, D.J. was watching the 6:30 a.m. news Sunday 
morning 
with the sound down low when she heard about the attack on Afra. In a second 
she 
was shaking Rae awake, then turning up the sound. " . . . stabbed seven times. 
Mrs. Griffin was hospitalized following the midnight assault and is reported 
in 
critical condition," the newswoman's voice was saying while the television 
showed a picture of the Coat of Arms Apartments building without identifying 
its 
location. "The reason for the attack remains a mystery, but local authorities 
are warning residents to lock and deadbolt their doors and to be extra

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

cautious 
about strangers." 

D.J. felt frozen. "Why didn't you take the gun to bed with you?" she 
whispered. 
"Why wasn't somebody guarding you? Why didn't you come with me?" 

Rae was on the phone, talking in a low voice, still rubbing the sleep out of 
her 
eyes. D.J. twisted one hand inside the other. She wished Gary were there, 
talking sense to her, the way he had during the other bad time, telling her 
she 
hadn't done anything to make Chase the way he was, that there was nothing she 
could have done to stop him even if she had known what he was doing that she 
wasn't a horrible person just because a monster had chosen her to love. She 
closed her eyes and clutched her nightgown in her hands and tugged. The fabric 
was too strong to rip. Why hadn't she figured that he would go after Afra? 
Wasn't Afra the one who had foiled his last attempt at a kill? Didn't it make 
logical sense? 

Would he go after Dr. Bollings next? 

"I have to call," said D.J., surging up off her bed and going to Rae. "I have 
to 
call my boss. Maybe he's already gone after her. What about Dara. What about 
Morgan. I don't think he knew Morgan was there. What if he drove a little 
distance away and saw all of us coming out of the building? I don't even know 
Morgan's phone number! But Chase knows everything he's been watching maybe he 
can find Morgan. I don't know where Morgan lives. He killed Gary and Gary was 
a 
cop. Gary couldn't stop him. He tortured Gary. He might torture Morgan. Then 
Gary would have to go through that twice and everybody else in Morgan and 
Morgan 
--" 

Rae shook her shoulders. "Get a grip, D.J." 

D.J. blinked and said, "I have to call Dr. Bollings." 

"They've dispatched somebody to the residences of all the doctors in the 
office. 
They're all fine. We've advised Dr. Bollings and Dr. Kabukin to either leave 
town or come in for protection -- " 

"And Morgan?" How could she have gone with the police on Friday night and left 
Morgan to fend for himself? Even though it had been Gary who said good night 
to 
her. "Good," he had said, "now that I know you're safe, maybe I can figure 
something out." 

"Protect yourself," she had told him. 

"Oh, I will," he said. He had retrieved the baseball bat. 

Tears in her eyes, D.J. had kissed Morgan/Gary good-bye, the first time she'd 
ever kissed Gary. During the case she had been too emotionally bruised to do 
anything besides hang onto him, and afterward she had left. Now his 
desperation 
matched hers. It had been hard to let go of him.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Yes, if Chase had only driven a little ways away, and had turned back to see 
that embrace, he would be gunning for Morgan too. 

"What if he's already killed Morgan!" she cried, pulling on her hair. 

"Shh," said Rae. "Round him up, okay, Rifkin?" She listened, then looked at 
D.J. 
"You have an address for him?" 

"No. Dr. Kabukin knows, but I don't. Yesterday was our first date." 

"Boy," said Rae. "Some fun." She told the person on the other end to check 
with 
Dr. Kabukin to get a twenty on Morgan Hesch, and hung up. 

D.J. twisted her nightgown. "Is Afra still alive?" 

"Not dead, but still critical. Still comatose. One of the other tenants heard 
a 
shot and came down and interrupted the attack." 

"A shot? Did they find the bullet?" I hope she killed him! D.J. thought. 

"Yeah. Lodged in a wall. It may have nicked him; the lab results aren't in on 
all the blood yet." 

"He didn't leave a trail, huh?" 

"If he did, the paramedics messed it up getting in and getting her out of 
there." 

"Oh, God." Still clutching at her nightgown, D.J. sat on her unmade bed. 

A loud knock at the door made her jump, her heart pumping. 

Rae picked up her gun and went to the door. Standing to one side, she said, 
"Who's there?" 

"Mitchell," said a woman's voice. 

Rae opened the door and let in a short, older woman. "My relief," she said to 
D.J. "D.J., this is Detective Mitchell." 

"You're leaving?" D.J. said, then hated herself for sounding so despairing. 

"It's my day with the kid, and I have two weeks' worth of laundry to do," Rae 
said. "Don't worry. Livvy will take care of you." 

D.J. stood up. Business mode, she thought, and held out her hand. "I'm sure 
she 
will. Nice to meet you, Detective." 

Mitchell had a firm handshake and a no-nonsense face. 

Rae dressed. "Downtown I'll keep you posted on Mrs. Griffin's progress." Rae 
picked up a paper sack of her things, shook hands with D.J., and ducked out 
the 
door. 

Sunday after Rae left was pure hell. By six p.m. D.J. wanted to strangle

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Mitchell, who was close-mouthed and mean and seemed to resent looking after 
D.J.D.J. said, "Come on. You can at least tell me if Morgan's alive or dead." 

After fifteen minutes of silence, Mitchell sighed. "They picked him  up. He's 
all right. They've got him in protective custody down at the jail." 

"Couldn't he come here?" 

"Jail's for his own protection. He's crazy as a bedbug." 

Crazy? D.J. felt blank. Then she remembered how Timmy liked to sneak up behind 
the divider at the office, then leap up with a loud boo and revel in her 
screams. How sometimes Mishka just sat and sobbed, not even knowing what to do 
with the tissues D.J. offered her. How Shadow, sounding like an old radio 
show, 
was prone to making dark and esoteric pronouncements that didn't make sense 
once 
you dissected them. How even Clift could get on her nerves if he watched her 
too 
closely and commented on her every move, analyzing the way she bit a pencil or 
scratched her nose. 

That had been before she started talking to him, though. Once they began 
having 
conversations, her belief in his craziness had evaporated. 

She sighed. She guessed she should just be happy that he was safe, and that 
the 
police and the FBI were taking this seriously. After another block of 
television-filled, conversation-empty time, D.J. said, "Could I go to jail?" 

"There's no television in the cells, the beds aren't comfortable, and the 
food's 
much worse, but hey, if that's your pleasure, I cantake you in." 

"I'll pack." 

FIVE 

Morgan had stubble. He looked pale, sad, and confused. The door to his cell 
was 
locked. 

"Oh, Morgan!" D.J. said. She turned on Mitchell. "How come he's locked up? 
He's 
not a suspect! . . . Is he?" 

"No. Like I told you before, it's for his own protection. If you heard the way 
he was talking . . . " 

"Doro, what are you doing here?" Gary said. "I thought they had you farmed out 
someplace." 

"Yeah, they did, but I'd rather be with you. I was going nuts wondering if you 
were all right." 

"'Course I'm all right. I don't think it's a good idea, your being here. Chase 
is canny. He could get in here somehow and get you." 

"Oh, yeah, Loon? Just how?" asked Mitchell.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

"Pose as an informant, a delivery boy, even an officer; get pulled in for 
something simple like disturbing the peace; if he dyed his hair, accessorized 
with a mustache, eyebrows, teeth, changed his clothes, he could slip right 
past 
you people. You've got other things on your minds." 

Mitchell's jaw dropped for a brief second before she closed her mouth. D.J. 
felt 
delighted. 

D.J. said, "I'm not good at sitting around a room with nothing to do and no 
one 
to talk to. Officer Mitchell was with me as a guard, but she's not very 
friendly. I thought you'd be much more entertaining." 

"Undoubtedly," said Clift. 

"I could come with you to wherever it was you were," Gary said. 

"Officer Mitchell doesn't think so. She says she couldn't keep you under 
control. How come you convinced everybody here you were crazy?" 

"Morgan doesn't coordinate well when he's wakened from a sound sleep," said 
one 
of the women, the one with the Southern accent. "I had to do the initial 
talking, and for some reason that spooked them." Morgan's face smiled. It was 
another new expression, self-contained and narrow. It reminded D.J. of a cat. 

"Are you Valerie or Elaine?" D.J. asked. 

"Valerie, sugar." 

"Hi." 

"Hi, honey." 

"Glad to meet you," D.J. said, and Morgan got up and came to the bars, staring 
into her eyes. His own had a touch of green in them now. She studied them so 
she 
would know Valerie again by something other than her voice. She held out her 
hand. Morgan's lashes fluttered down, then opened again as he took her hand. 
The 
little cat smile widened into something friendly. 

"Pleased to make your acquaintance, hon," said Valerie. She kissed D.J.'s 
hand, 
then looked confused. 

D.J. squeezed Morgan's hand. She thought about her talk with Dr. Bollings. 
"Morgan, what if I'm bad for you?" 

"Deej, you're not the problem," said Clift. 

"What if I'm making you sicker?" 

"Oh, please!" said Saul. "You know we're not sick! In fact, I think you're the 
only one who knows it besides us. At least I thought you knew it. They 
brainwashing you, babe?"

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

D.J. looked away, closed her eyes. It Was time to make a decision about this. 
Dr. Kabukin and Dr. Bollings thought Morgan had some kind of mental illness, 
and 
D.J. respected them as professionals. On the other hand, she knew Gary was 
real, 
and she felt that all the others had independent existences, too. Time to 
believe in herself again instead of the experts, after these torturous years 
of 
doubting everything she had ever known. She opened her eyes and stared up at 
Saul. "No," she said, baring her teeth in a nasty grin at him and pinching his 
cheek. "I know you're not crazy." 

"What a load of bullshit!" said Mitchell. "I ought to lock you up for being 
crazy too!" 

"Hey, Morgan, you want to go to a hotel with me?" D.J. said. 

His eyes lit up. "Miss Deej!" he said, himself at last. "You're teasing." 

"No. All you have to do is prove to Officer Mitchell that you'll, uh, 
cooperate, 
not wander off, obey orders. Not get us in danger." 

"There's no way he can prove that to my satisfaction," said Mitchell. 

D.J. frowned, wondering if Mitchell had enough power to make decisions about 
her 
and Morgan. Business mode, she thought. I put on my persona, I know where 
everything goes, I am unfailingly polite, organized, relaxed, I can follow the 
chain of command, I know how to find out what I need to know. I get things 
done. 
Business mode. Even though, in her relaxed clothes, Reeboks, jeans, and a big 
black T-shirt, she wasn't dressed for it. "Who's your superior? Who assigns 
the 
duties around here?" 

Mitchell snorted. "On a Sunday evening? Good luck." 

"Excuse me, Morgan," D.J. said, and wandered out into the main room of the 
station. "Somebody in charge here?" There were a lot fewer people in the 
station 
than there had been Friday night. She headed for the front desk. "Sergeant?" 

"Yes?" 

"Hi. I'm D.J. Demain. I've got somebody assigned to protect me while this guy, 
Chase Kennedy, is trying to kill me. Mitchell, the woman who's guarding me, 
isn't -- I just wondered if there was anybody else you could assign?" 

He smiled at her and said, "Pleasant isn't in the job description for guarding 
witnesses, Miss Demain." 

"You're right. What I'd really like is for me and my friend Morgan to go 
underground in a hotel, but Mitchell doesn't think she can handle him. Is 
self-confidence in the job description?" 

"She scared of that skinny guy?" he said. 

"Well, he talks in strange voices."

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

He looked at her for a while, then glanced around the room. "Hey, Harley, you 
doing anything specific tonight?" 

A man in plain clothes who had his feet up on a desk and a True Romance in his 
hands glanced up. "Waiting for anything that might develop," he said. He was a 
large man with thinning brown hair. He looked sleepy. 

"You want to watch a couple of witnesses overnight?" 

"They going to do anything interesting?" 

The desk sergeant looked at D.J. and raised his eyebrows. 

"It's our second date," D.J. said to Harley. "I sometimes go all the way on a 
second date." 

"I'm game," Harley said, lowering his feet and rising. He was taller than D.J. 
had thought; his clothes were sloppy yet suitable-- a biscuit-brown suit, a 
half-untucked white shirt, a medium-width red tie loosened at the neck. He 
folded his magazine, tucked it into his inside jacket pocket, and ambled over. 
"Hello," he said. 

"Hello," said D.J., holding out her hand. "D.J. Demain." 

"Just call me Harley. I don't tell anybody my, first name." His handshake was 
enveloping but gentle. 

"My friend Morgan is locked up. He's the other witness. Could somebody let him 
out?" 

The sergeant handed some keys over to Harley, and D.J. and Harley headed for 
the 
jail cells. "You're with the kook?" 

"Mm," said D.J., nodding. 

"This does sound entertaining." 

Morgan was in a far comer of his cell, curled up nose to knees, and Mitchell 
was 
standing close to the bars, glaring at him. 

D.J. said, "Hey, Morgan, look what I found! It's Harley. He's.taking us to a 
hotel now." 

Morgan scrubbed a hand over his face and unfolded. 

"What?" said Mitchell, outraged. 

Harley unlocked the door, and Morgan came over, eyes wide. 

"Hi, Morgan," said Harley, holding out his hand; 

"Hi, Harley." Gary was the one who answered. He grinned and shook hands. "You 
got any shaving gear? I'm starting to irritate myself." 

"We could stop at a twenty-four-hour market on the way over, if you two will 
crouch down in the back seat while I go in and make the buy." 

"No problem," said Gary.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

"Either of you have any money?" 

"I do," said D.J. She opened her purse and fished out thirty dollars. She 
handed 
him the bills. 

"Hot damn! We could pick up some doughnuts and hot coffee. Make a shopping 
list, 
kids. Let's go." 

"Harley, you haven't seen what I've seen," Mitchell said. 

"I'm sure that's true," said Harley. "What are you talking about?" "He's 
possessed." 

"Morgan?" Harley said. "Any truth to the rumor?" 

"Yeah," said Gary. 

"Demons?" 

"No. Ghosts." 

"None of them is the Devil?" 

"Nope. Just normal people." 

"Good. Because that Satanic cult stuff gets on my nerves. If you started 
chanting in tongues and spewing pea soup I might have to get rough." 

"Nothing like that," said Gary. 

"Good. Let's go." 

Harley made them wait in the stairwell with their luggage while he checked the 
parking garage. He made them duck down in the back seat before he drove out of 
the parking garage into the street. "It's likely he saw you come in, D.J.," he 
said. "Or at least possible. Let's not take any stupid chances." 

"Fine with me," said D.J., lying down on the back seat with her head near 
Morgan's. She was just glad that Harley drove a large American car with lots 
of 
leg room. 

Morgan peeked at her, and Mishka began giggling. 

"Who's that?" Harley said, driving. "That you, D.J.?" "Uh," said D.J. 

"Peek-a-boo," Mishka said at the same time, her voice high and sweet and 
bubbly. 
"Peek!" 

Harley glanced back over the seat. Mishka hid her eyes with her hands, then 
pulled her hands aside and said, "Peek!" 

"Eerie," said Harley. 

D.J. sighed. "That's Mishka. She's three."

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

"A three-year-old ghost?" 

"Eyoo," said D.J., who hadn't considered it like that. 

"How'd she die?" Harley said. 

"Morgan?" D.J. said. 

Mishka's eyes clouded. Her mouth trembled. "Water," she murmured. "Wah wah." 

D.J. reached out and stroked her hair. "It's okay. It's okay. Look, now you 
have 
a big old body to play in." 

Mishka calmed, then disappeared. Saul's sneer showed up in her place. "Don't 
I, 
though?" he said, and leered at her. 

"Not as big as Harley's," said DJ. "Low blow, babe." 

She smirked at him. 

"So who's this one?" Harley asked. 

"Saul. Some punk from Jersey." D.J. stuck her tongue out at him. 

"Give it to me, baby," said Saul. 

"Shut up." She said it lazily, her previous instant fury with anything Saul 
said 
gone. 

He shrugged and smiled. 

"How many are there ?" Harley asked. 

D.J. tried to count in her head. "Eight?" she asked Morgan. 

"Think so," he said in his own voice. "Plus me." 

"So who's that?" 

"That's really Morgan," D.J. said 

"Whom did I meet in jail?" 

"Listen carefully, Buford," said Gary. "Take a wild guess." 

The car jerked. The wheels squealed. The car continued driving, though; Harley 
did not turn around. "No," he said in a low voice. 

"Sorry to bring it up this way, Harley. Guess I should have waited till we got 
to the hotel." 

"No," said Harley. 

"All right. I'll shut up now. If you want, I don't have to talk to you 
anymore. 
Just make sure they get the bastard for me, before he gets Doro."

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Without another word, Harley pulled into a parking lot. He turned the car off. 
After a couple minutes' silence, he said, "Stay down, you two. I'm locking you 
in. Don't you dare show yourselves." He got out of the car and slammed the 
door 
shut. 

They lay in silence for a while. Outside the car windows, darkness lay, the 
edge 
taken off it by the big lighted sign of the supermarket. The car smelled like 
vinyl. D.J. realized the night was cold, and wished she had taken a jacket out 
of her duffel, which was safely locked in the trunk. "Morgan?" she whispered 
at 
last. 

"Yeah?" 

"Gary knows Harley?" 

Morgan sighed. "I forgot my speech, even though Dr. Dara taught me and taught 
me. 'I didn't mean anything by it. Have a nice day.'" 

"I don't think that would work on Harley, hon." 

Morgan sighed again. Then Gary said, "I consulted with him on a case when he 
was 
working up in Seattle. Never knew he was down here now, otherwise I'd have 
said 
we should get in touch with him. We've never met face to face, but we spent 
hours on the phone. Just couldn't resist telling him that way, and I guess I 
should have. It seemed like such a great joke." 

They lay in silence. D.J. wondered what she would do if a face appeared at the 
window staring down at them. What if it were Chase? She hid her face in the 
crook of her arm. 

A key rattled in the lock, the door opened, and Harley tossed a loaded brown 
paper bag over the seat-back. Morgan caught it before it could land on D.J.'s 
head. The car engine growled to life and they were traveling again. 

Harley drove erratically for a while, turning corners quickly, slowing, 
starting, pulling over. They even hit the freeway briefly. No one spoke. 

Finally they stopped somewhere else. "Stay down," Harley said in a remote 
voice, 
leaving them again. When he came back after a little while, he dropped a key 
with a plastic tag on D.J.'s head. She grabbed it. 

"I've gotten us two connecting rooms, just in case you kids want a little 
privacy for your second date," Harley said. 

"Thanks," D.J. said. 

"The rooms are around back where the entrances can't be seen from the road." 
He 
started the car again. After a short trip, he turned the engine off and said, 
"The coast is clear, kids. Let's make a break." 

When D.J. tried to sit up, she discovered how stiff she was from an hour of 
crouching. Harley hauled their things out of the trunk and took them into a 
room. Morgan groaned and sat up, grabbing the grocery bag. "Do you think he

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

hates me?" he asked. 

"No," said D.J. "He's just upset." 

"I don't want him to hate me. I like him." 

"So do I." She peered out the window, saw that they were in a sheltered spot 
and 
she couldn't see anybody else around, just some quiet cars pulled up to 
anonymous doors in the anonymous dark, lit only by orange outdoor lights 
placed 
at intervals along the motel's back face. 

"Come on," she said, clutching the key to room 156. 

They got out and unlocked the door. 

D.J. had to smile. One-fifty-six was a double double. So maybe Harley hadn't 
taken her absolutely seriously when she told him about its being the second 
date. She and Morgan had a choice. 

She went and opened the connecting door, already unlocked on Harley's side. 
Morgan closed the room's curtains and turned on a few lamps. This motel was a 
step up from the one D.J. had stayed in with Rae. There was stationery and a 
Gideon Bible in the desk drawer, and the light bulbs were at least sixty 
watts. 

From the other room came the sound of television. She knocked on the open 
connecting doorway and entered when Harley nodded to her. 

She said, "I was wondering about Afra's condition. My landlady, Afra Griffin. 
She was attacked last night. Mitchell wouldn't tell me much about her." 

Harley grabbed the phone and dialed, spoke quietly while D.J. leaned against 
the 
wall and looked at the television: a TV movie about an abusive husband and a 
passive wife, with children thrown in for plot complications. Morgan wandered 
in 
carrying a Saran-wrapped sheet of mixed doughnuts. "Want to take a shower," he 
said. He put the doughnuts on the table at Harley's elbow and retrieved his 
suitcase from where Harley had left it after unpacking the car. 

"Harley's finding out about Afra," murmured D.J. 

Morgan gave her a look then, his eyes dark and so wide she could see the 
whites 
all the way around the irises, his mouth hanging slightly open. A chill iced 
her 
spine: it was the first time he had really scared her. Then he blinked and 
looked at her from under his eyebrows, a Gary look, put an arm around her 
shoulders, kissed her cheek, and disappeared into their room. She stood 
looking 
after him, her hand to her cheek. 

"The news is not good," Harley said as he cradled the handset. 

She stared at him. 

He got to his feet, walked over, and took her hands. "Come on, sit down," he 
said, leading her to the bed. She sat, and he sat in a chair across from her,

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

still holding her hands. His brown eyes looked tired. "She's gone," he said 
gently. "Your friend is gone." 

Shock stilled everything in her for a long minute. Then all her connections 
let 
loose and she collapsed backward onto the bed, her hands pulling out of his. 
"No," she muttered. "No." 

It's all my fault. If I had never moved in to her apartment, if I had never 
gotten to be friends with her, if Chase had just killed me when he came for me 
instead of Afra stopping him, maybe she'd be alive today. 

Surely death and destruction shall follow me all the days of my life, and I 
will 
dwell in the house of chaos forever. Amen. 

D.J. put her hands up around her neck and squeezed her throat. 

Harley gripped her wrists and pulled her hands away. D.J. coughed. 

"You didn't do it," Harley said, holding her wrists. 

"It happened because of me." Her voice hurt coming out. Hot tears spilled out 
of 
her eyes, streaking down the sides of her head. A moment later she was 
swallowing choked sobs and trying to twist away from him. He released her and 
got up. She cuffed tight, burying her face under her forearms, crying. How 
could 
this be? Afra, watering the dahlias, whispering to her that the tenants in 2D 
were probably going to have a baby, and wasn't it a pity, the way they fought? 
Afra, sniffing at science. Afra offering her Dutch cocoa on a rainy winter 
night. D.J. remembered a constellation of photographs in driftwood frames, 
laughing young men and women, babies, children, that had sat among conch 
shells 
on Afra's piano: relatives. Sons? Daughters? Grandchildren? All bereft now. 
And 
no chance for her, for any of them, to say goodbye. 

"It should have been me," she whispered. She didn't have anybody who'd 
remember 
her, except a mother who didn't know whether she was alive or dead anyway, and 
a 
ghost. 

"It shouldn't have been anybody!" Harley yelled. "Get it through your head! It 
shouldn't happen at all, but it is happening, and you can't control it! The 
only 
one who can control it is Kennedy, until we catch him, and don't you think we 
blame ourselves -- don't you think we know it's our fault that he got away in 
the first place and that he's getting away with this now?" His face was red 
with 
rage. 

D.J. rubbed her eyes until she saw purple stars, then looked up at him and 
detached herself from within. He's upset, she thought. Do I need to be upset 
now? Maybe I should save it for later. She crushed her anguish down and let 
control filter to the fore. "I'm sorry," she said in a steady voice. 

"Yes, well," said Harley, his voice stabilizing too. He wiped his forehead 
with

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

a handkerchief. "Best I can do is watch you two carefully, stop it from 
happening here." 

"I'm going to bed now," D.J. said in a small voice. 

"D.J . . . "He slumped in the chair. "I'm sorry. That outburst. I'm sorry. I 
didn't think I would --" 

"It's all right," she said. 

"No," he said, "but it happened. I'm sorry you lost your friend. Is there 
anything I can do?" 

"I don't. . ." She pushed herself up, managed to get to her feet. "Can't think 
of anything. I'm really tired." 

"Yes. Leave the door open, kiddo. If you need anything in the night, give a 
yell." 

"Okay," She stumbled into the other room. He followed a minute later, carrying 
her duffel, and put it on the dresser. The sound of the shower still came 
through the bathroom door. Harley ambled back into the other room without 
saying 
anything else, and D.J. dragged over to her duffel, pulling a nightgown and 
her 
toiletries purse out but then lying on the bed with them beside her, without 
the 
energy to do anything else. 

An arm was around her. D.J. opened her eyes. The last she remembered, she had 
been lying on her back, but now she was cuffed up, her nightgown still 
clutched 
in her hands, the heat of a body at her back, the soap-clean scent of a 
stranger 
in her nose, and a strange arm resting around her, its hand flat on her 
stomach. 
Light leaked from the bathroom; all the other lights in the room were out. She 
glanced down at the arm, saw it was a man's, naked, thin but sinewy, with a 
growth of fine black hairs on it. She lay for a while staring straight ahead 
at 
the wallpaper, which had a faint rick-rack pattern, brown on beige. It came to 
her that Afra was dead. A black knot twisted her stomach, and hot tears seeped 
from her eyes. She let go of the nightgown and put one hand on Morgan's hand 
on 
her stomach. He murmured something and pressed up against her back, digging 
his 
chin into her shoulder. Suddenly she wanted to be held more than anything 
else. 
She lifted his hand and rolled over to face him. He had shaved. His eyes were 
closed, and his slow breath flickered the ends of his mustache. 

"Valerie?" she murmured. "Valerie?" 

After a moment his eyes opened. It was too dark for her to see their color. 
"Hon?" murmured Valerie. 

"Could you hold me, please?" 

Valerie stretched and yawned, patting her mouth as she did. Morgan was wearing 
a

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

pair of jockey shorts, nothing else. He looked more muscular naked than he 
ever 
had inside his clothes. Valerie put her arms around D.J., stroking her back in 
soothing circles. 

D.J. closed her eyes and relaxed, curled against Morgan's front. After a long 
moment, she said, "Afra's dead." 

"I know, sugar. I know." The massage was smooth, calming. D.J. drifted back to 
sleep. 

Daylight was sifting through the curtains. D.J. woke up feeling sticky. Her 
mouth tasted like moldy cheese. Morgan was asleep. D.J. slid out of his arms, 
grabbed her purse, and went into the bathroom. 

She felt much better after a shower, deodorant, baby powder, and teeth 
brushing. 
She was ready to eat something, anything. She wondered if Harley had eaten all 
dozen doughnuts in the night. After sliding into her sweaty T-shirt, she 
sneaked 
back out and ransacked her duffel for other clothes, then retreated to the 
bathroom again, glancing at Morgan before she shut the door. She stopped when 
she realized his eyes were open and he was looking at her. 

"Pasty," said a new voice coming from his mouth. 

"What?" D.J. straightened. She clapped a hand over her mouth, felt her eyes 
going wide. 

Morgan struggled up on his elbows. He squinched his face up, then relaxed it 
into a frown. 

"Too soon," said Clift, rumbling a little. "Way too soon." Evidently he wasn't 
good at mornings. He waved a limp hand at D.J. "Go get dressed." 

D.J. ducked into the bathroom and dressed slowly. The new voice. Familiar. 

Afra's. 

SIX 

Morgan?" She said when she came out of the bathroom. She had picked one of her 
dresses to wear today, a crush-proof comfortable polyester number in burgundy. 
Morgan had pulled on jeans and had his head bent forward, brushing his hair 
down 
over his face. "What?" asked the Lauren Bacall voice from beneath the hair. 

"Elaine?" said D.J., sitting on the bed beside Morgan. The voice wasn't 
Valerie's; it sounded deeper, devoid of accent, and smokier. 

"Mm-hmm," said the Lauren Bacall voice. "I'm the hygiene nut." She tossed her 
head back and brushed the hair out of her face. "You should have seen this boy 
before I got here. Talk about socially unacceptable!" 

"Does he like it, that you -- take care of him?" 

"'Course! He's grateful. He's not stupid, you know; he realizes that this kind 
of maintenance makes people accept him more. Nobody else ever taught him these 
things. Mostly his mother just left him in the basement and told him not to 
make

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

any noise." She finished brushing. "Got a robber band, sis?" 

D.J. searched through the purse Morgan had filled with her bathroom supplies, 
found the pouch with hair things in it. D.J. wore short permed hair at the 
moment, but she had had her long hair days, too, until she got tired of having 
to deal with it all the time. She handed Elaine a braided elastic loop, and 
Elaine twisted it around Morgan's long black hair, making a ponytail down the 
back. 

"Normally he likes the jungle look, so he can hide behind his hair if the 
moment 
demands it. But I think we can do without that today," Elaine said. 

Harley stood on the threshold of their room and knocked on the door sill. 
"Decent?" he said. 

Morgan's lip lifted in Saul's sneer, but he didn't say anything out loud. 

"Come on in," D.J. said. "I'm starving." 

Morgan looked through his suitcase and pulled out a white shirt with billowy 
sleeves, like the shirts pirates wore in Errol Flynn movies. "Eh?" Saul said, 
as 
he held the shirt up to his chest, lifting one of the sleeves, shaking the 
lace-edged ruffled cuff at her. 

"Who does your shopping?" asked D.J. 

"It's a constant battle," Saul said. "Mostly we shop in thrift stores, so we 
can 
get a piece of clothing for each of us." He slipped the shirt on over his 
head. 
"I don't think our style makes us popular at parties. The bits don't go 
together." 

"Does that voice trick work for you or against you?" Harley asked. 

"What do you mean?" 

"You could put it all together into some kind of act, if you had a writer. 
It's 
uncanny how different your voices are." 

"That's what I thought," Afra said. "Lots of potential." 

D.J.'s face prickled and her fingers tingled. 

"Shut up," said Clift. "Not yet." He sat down on the bed next to D.J. "You're 
pale. We're sorry, Deej. I know it's a shock. It's a shock to us too, every 
time 
this happens. We haven't settled in yet." 

D.J. gripped a fold of her dress, staring down at the material. "There's some 
kind of selection process, isn't there? I mean, not every single person who 
dies 
comes and gets inside you, only special ones --otherwise you'd be legion, 
right? 
You have ghosts from all over the states! How do you pick them?" 

"I suspect a prerequisite for it is that we have to believe in ghosts, one way

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

or another, to become them," Clift said. "Another thing that distinguishes us 
from garden variety ghosts is that we are impregnated with some sense of 
mission, at least initially. Violent death seems to have quite a bit to do 
with 
it. Then there's resonance. Morgan isn't the only ghost magnet in the world, 
but 
he emits a certain resonance that appeals to a select few, namely those of us 
here. In effect, there's quite a strict entrance exam." 

She twisted her dress between her hands. "Does Morgan have any say about 
this?" 

"I want her," Morgan said. He patted D.J.'s shoulder. "I like her. She's real 
nice. You want her to go away, Miss Deej?" 

"No, of course not," she said, turning to look at him through a glaze of 
tears. 
"I can't quite understand it yet, but I'm glad she's here. But I just worry 
about you, Morgan. It must be so crowded inside you" 

"I have all these friends to talk to," he said. 

"But what if they all want to talk at once?" 

"I tried to introduce us to Robert's Rules of Order, but the others say that's 
silly," Clift said. "If we didn't like each other, this would be a nightmare. 
However, I admire all of us." 

"Even Saul?" 

"Oh, yes. He's a pain in the butt, but he doesn't mean anything by it. He has 
certain strengths the rest of us don't." 

Harley vanished into his room and returned with half a dozen doughnuts, which 
he 
offered to D.J. and Morgan. D.J. grabbed three cake doughnuts. Morgan took one 
glazed twist. 

"Aren't you, like, eating for twelve?" Harley asked Morgan. 

"Most of us don't care for sweets," said Clift. "This is for Gary." 

"Oh, God," Harley said, sitting down at the table. "Gary." He mopped his 
forehead with a handkerchief. "I think I better get this straight now. D.J., 
you 
buy this whole ghost-possession thing?" 

"Yes," mumbled D.J. around a mouthful of doughnut. 

"Even though it makes no sense." 

"I don't think I can explain it any other way. Besides, Gary --" "Gary?" 

"I knew Gary in San Francisco, Harley. He says he consulted with you on a case 
while you were in Seattle. Were you in Seattle before you came to Spores 
Ferry?" 

"Oh, God," said Harley. 

"How could he know that if he wasn't Gary?"

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

"Maybe he's psychic." 

"You accept psychic but you don't believe in spooks?" 

"I don't know what I believe." He stared at Morgan. "Gary?" 

"Buford?" 

Harley cringed. "Don't call me that!" 

"Heh heh heh." Gary wolfed his doughnut. "Okay, Harley." 

"You used to be a sensible guy," Harley said after a pause. "How . . . the 
hell 
. . . are you surviving this? Surviving. Is that the word? If that is you in 
there, isn't it driving you crazy?" 

Gary frowned and stared at the rug. After a long silence, he said, "I woke 
up." 
He glanced at Harley. "You know how I died?" 

"Heard," said Harley. 

Gary looked at D.J., then shrugged. "I never wanted to feel anything again. 
The 
sleep was such a relief. I think I stayed in it for a while. Fact, Clift tells 
me I was gone, nowhere, null, a couple weeks, before I woke up. 

"Probably the last thing I was thinking about besides pain was Doro. I knew 
the 
boyfriend was looking for her, and I had aimed him right at her. I opened my 
eyes, and there she was. There you were," he said, looking at D.J., "at least 
the top of your head, over that wall. Hair color and style changed, but then 
you 
looked up, and there were those eyes. Never forget 'em." 

She stared at him, a trembling smile surfacing. 

"I couldn't figure out how that happened. Which was the dream? Death, or 
waking 
up? Then all these people started talking to me, all these strangers, big 
blonde 
woman, little baby girl, professor type, black kid, a whole bunch of them, 
saying 'Settle down! Settle down, brother, let us explain.'" 

He sat still for a while, staring toward the curtains, then frowned and 
glanced 
down at his hands. "Well, it was one wild explanation. But you know . . ." He 
looked up at Harley, smiled. "It's nice in here. Never been close to so many 
people. I was a loner before, and I thought this was my worst nightmare, but 
actually --" 

Harley shuddered. "More power to you." 

Gary burst out laughing, leaned against D.J. She smiled, finding his joy 
infectious. 

"Know what?" Gary said when he had stopped laughing. "I can't even buy a 
beer."

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Harley frowned. "Do you want one?" 

"Not especially. It just strikes me as --" He shook his head, smiling. "And 
voting. Boy. Can't wait to see how we handle that. And registering for 
selective 
service?" He frowned. "We do that yet?" He listened to something D.J. and 
Harley 
couldn't hear. "Oh, of course, we'd qualify for an exemption." He shook his 
head. "Kid's been in therapy for three years already and he's only nineteen. 
Nobody gets a normal adolescence." 

"Cut to the chase," Clift said. 

"Sorry," said Gary. "Right. The point is to stop the boyfriend." 

"Already a lot of people working on that." 

"We have certain resources they don't have." 

"Like what?" 

Morgan drew in a deep breath, sat up straight, licked his lips. Afra said, her 
voice tight with pain, "My name is Afra Griffin. He came to my apartment." 

Harley's eyes went wide. He hunched his shoulders. 

"His hair was different. Blond. It was the middle of the night, and I was 
asleep. I had my gun on the bedside table, on a shelf you couldn't see without 
being in the bed. He didn't know. He taped my mouth. He tied me . . . " She 
glanced at D.J., stopped. She looked at Harley. "Gary said it was his standard 
M.O. They probably told you all that. I got a hand free, but by that time he, 
well, I couldn't aim as well as I used to. Shot him in the arm. Right forearm. 
Stopped him. He had to go tie a bandage around it, and then noise came from 
upstairs. Shot woke up the Lutzes. So he scampered out of there." 

Her eyes closed, and her face tightened, as if suddenly Morgan were all 
cheekbone and temple. She opened her eyes. "He asked me things at first. Where 
D.J. was. He'd rip the tape up off my mouth so I could answer, then put it 
down 
again. I told him you went with the police. Then, when I didn't have any more 
answers, then, he just . . . " 

She shook herself. "Here's what I remember. He was wearing gray pants, a white 
shirt, red suspenders. He had bleached his hair platinum blond since the day 
before. By the time he left, his shirt was bloody and his pants were too. So 
he 
would have had to change them, either dump them or clean them. He had a big 
army 
overcoat he took off before he started on me, and he wrapped up in it before 
he 
ran away. I heard that beetle noise, like Saul said. VW Bug. So. You're 
looking 
for a blond who drives a VW and wears a full-length army jacket, olive drab. 
He's got a gunshot wound in his right forearm." 

"I'll phone that in." 

Gary said, "What are you going to tell them when they ask where you got the 
information?"

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

"A witness." Harley struggled to his feet. "Don't worry. I can make this fly 
somehow. I'll be right back." 

D.J. turned to look at Morgan, took his hands. 

"You told me he did impressions," Afra said, and smiled. 

"That sounds more believable than the reality, doesn't it?" 

Afra rolled her eyes, something D.J. had seen her do a dozen times in her 
previous incarnation. It meant what a world, what a world. She said, "You see, 
I've been telling them Harley's right. We could put an act together, if we had 
the right script. Did I ever tell you I used to be in the theater?" 

"You never did," said D.J. 

"Morgan doesn't know what he wants to do when he grows up," Afra said. "From 
what he tells me, he's just sampling various classes in school. I think we 
have 
a future in stand-up, but I haven't convinced any of the others." 

"A bit too public for my palate, sugar," said Valerie, distaste in her voice. 
"I 
would vastly prefer it if we just kept our little oddities to ourselves." 

"Yes, but we never do," said Clift. 

"That's because of Timmy and Saul," Valerie said. She wrinkled her nose. "I 
wish 
those boys would observe a few civil niceties. And you, Cliffie, have the 
lecture habit." 

"I don't think I could give it up if I tried, Val." 

"Oh, I don't know," Valerie said in a considering voice. "I just think we 
haven't found the proper motivation yet." 

Harley wandered back in. "Well, they took notes when I talked to them. Seems 
like they think insanity is contagious, and that I caught it from you, Morgan. 
Somebody'll be along soon with some real breakfast, D.J." 

"Good," she said, her stomach chiming in with a rumble, even though she had 
tried to quiet it with the doughnuts. "I forgot to get any dinner yesterday." 

"McNamara will bring us something good. Wonder what's on TV." He went toward 
the 
television and D.J. had a terrible sense of deja vu: watching the news Sunday 
morning, hearing about the attack on Afra. What if the news this morning 
brought 
more evil? Whom had she forgotten to protect this time? 

"Don't," she said in a little swallowed voice. And not only that, but right 
after the television announcement, Rae had disappeared. "Harley!" she cried. 
"Are you going to leave us too?" 

"What?" he said. 

"Like Rae. Yesterday. Suddenly someone came along and relieved her. I know you 
shouldn't have to work twenty-four hour days or anything, but I just. . ."

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

"Oh, that? No, I told downtown I'd stick with you, at least for the next two 
days. I may need a little time off now and then. Couple hours to go feed the 
cat, collect the mail. But I figured nobody else is going to make the 
adjustment 
I did." 

"Meaning me?" Gary asked. 

"Yeah. I still don't quite believe in you, but I do give you credibility. I 
think other people could easily make a mistake about you." 

"They do all the time," Clift said. 

Harley nodded, frowning. He looked at the television, now in reach, then 
glanced 
at D.I. "You don't want me to turn it on?" 

"I don't want to hear that there's been another attack." 

"I've already talked to downtown today, and they would have told me. Let's 
just 
check in with one of the morning programs. I need a news fix." 

"Okay," said D.J. She looked at Morgan. "Any of you play cards?" 

"I know one called Misery," said the Shadow's deep echoey voice. 

"You'll have to teach me," D.J. said. She had never had an extended 
conversation 
with the Shadow. She wondered how he had died, who he had been. He couldn't 
really be an old radio play character, could he? Getting to know Morgan would 
take a lot of time and work. 

"With great pleasure," the Shadow said. 

"So which one's that ?" asked Harley, glancing away from Regis & Kathie Lee. 

"Shadow," D.J. said, as the Shadow geared up and produced his long spooky 
laugh 
that started at a medium pitch and sank down into very low registers. 

Harley made a face as if he had smelled something bad. 

"Oh, come on," said D.J. "He's just a kid. How old are you, Shadow?" 

He glared at her. "Sixteen." It was the first time she had heard him say 
something in a normal voice. He sounded sullen and young. 

"You can sound scary if that's what you want," she said. "How do we play 
Misery?" She retrieved Rae's cards from her luggage and began shuffling. 

"Deal thirteen to each," he said in his spookiest voice. 

They were playing their second hand when a knock came on the door of Harley's 
room. Harley switched off the television, reached for his gun, and eased to 
the 
connecting door. "Who's there?" 

"Breakfast," said a voice through the door.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Panic started in D.J.'s chest and spread through her like fire feeding on 
lines 
of oil. She stared at Morgan. Morgan laid his cards down and looked out from 
under his brows. 

"Don't open the door," D.J. whispered to Harley. Morgan was on his feet, 
carrying his body with a focus and intensity foreign to him. "It's him." 

SEVEN 

B.J. Crept across the bed and picked up the phone. She felt as if she had 
swallowed a stone, and it lay in her stomach, pinning her down. She could not 
escape. Why even think of it? 

Calm, she was calm. She had Things to Do. She dialed 911. Morgan walked 
silently 
to the outside door of their room. He gripped the knob. 

"Breakfast?" said Harley in a sleepy voice. "I didn't order any breakfast. You 
sure you got the right room?" 

"Ambulance, fire, or police?" said a voice in D.J.'s ear. 

"Police," she whispered. She realized that she didn't even know what hotel 
they 
were in, Or the address, having come in blind the night before. She grabbed an 
ashtray off the bedside table and fished the matchbook out of it. "I'm D.J. 
Demain, a protected witness, here with Morgan Hesch and Detective Harley." She 
studied the matchbook. "We're at the Lamplighter Inn, 1342 Benjamin Boulevard, 
and Chase Kennedy, the escaped murderer, is trying to get into our room. Room 
154, around the back. Please send help." She cradled the phone silently. 

Morgan was watching Harley for a cue. Chase's voice said, "Room 154, that was 
my 
instruction from Detective McNamara." Chase sounded honestly confused. "But 
I'll 
leave if you want me to." 

D.J. felt cold. Chase knew the detective's name. Had he killed him? How else 
would he know where to come? If he had done something to the detective, he 
probably had the police car, the gun, the radio . . . he had found her job, 
and 
her apartment. There was no escape. She closed her eyes and shivered. She 
remembered this kind of cold from before, the Arctic place she had gone when 
she 
realized Chase was who he was and she had made all these wrong assumptions, 
when 
she had learned she could never trust herself again. She had lived with this 
cold for a long time before anger thawed her out. Maybe this brief tropical 
period had been an illusion. 

"Wait a sec," said Harley, his voice still sleepy. "What kind of breakfast you 
got ?" 

Morgan whispered, "Doro, get in the bathroom and lock the door." 

She stared at him. How could she leave him alone out here with Harley and 
Chase? 
How could any of them be here? What if Chase did something awful, shot Morgan

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

and Harley? There was no escape. 

She felt so cold . . . 

Maybe she could stop Chase somehow. It had happened before. She had to 
remember 
that. Maybe if she wasn't out here Morgan and Harley would both die and Chase 
would get away. Again. More deaths on her head. No, she couldn't stand that. 
Not 
again. 

Anger sparked somewhere inside. She could fight. She could go down fighting. 

"Do it," Morgan/Gary whispered. 

She didn't have any special defense training, and she knew she wasn't as 
strong 
as Chase physically. Much as she hated to admit it, she could help Morgan and 
Harley best by being out of the way and as safe as possible. She scooted into 
the bathroom and locked the door, then looked through her toiletries purse for 
weapons. A perfume bottle. She could spritz that in Chase's eyes if he somehow 
got through the door. Baby powder. Throw it in his face. Cold cream: squirt it 
on the floor in front of the door and make it slippery? She did it, spreading 
the pale goop with her hands. She lined up the rest of her arsenal on the 
counter, then worked the towel bar out of its holders. Whatever else happened, 
she wanted to take a big swipe at him, break his nose at least, his head at 
best, his balls. 

She sat on the closed toilet, the towel bar over one shoulder, and listened. 
Anger burned slow and steady. 

What happens if I die? Morgan wondered. Gary had the body; they all thought 
that 
was best; nobody was going to argue at a time like this. Gary had faced 
situations like this before. He was tense but relaxed. 

If I die, Morgan thought, we all die. He thought about each of his insiders, 
all 
their differences, all their samenesses; how Mishka loved ice cream and Elaine 
hated it, but put up with it for Mishka's sake; how Timmy taught the rest of 
them to play hopscotch, which a few could remember from grade school days but 
most had forgotten; how Valerie loved wind and wanted to run out into the 
middle 
of it any time it was blowing; how Afra knew the names of every flower, and 
the 
Shadow the names of every comic book hero; how Saul was hot for anything 
female, 
but usually wilted if any of them gave him a second look; how Clift liked to 
confuse people who thought Morgan was stupid by being smarter than they could 
ever be; how Gary liked to laugh, so deep it felt like it came from his toes. 

He couldn't die. He barely even knew Afra and Gary yet. Where would all the 
insiders go if they lost him? 

Gary clenched his jaw, feeling fire sear through his muscles. He wanted to 
kill 
Chase, stamp him out, crush him. He wanted to whip welts into him, smash his 
head between two rocks and destroy that corrupted brain. He drew in long 
draughts of breath, trying to calm himself, but it was difficult: hadn't he 
come

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

back just to do this one thing? What else was there? His goal was just the 
other 
side of a door. All he had to do was open the door and grab. 

"Maybe, if it's a real good breakfast, I'll open the door," Harley said. "I 
guess I am kind of hungry." 

"Sorry. Just McDonald's, but there's a lot." 

"Sounds great," said Harley. "What's the password?" 

"Password?" 

"Yeah, you know, there's always a password." 

"The password is --" The sound of a shot. 

"Go!" yelled Harley to Gary, backing into room 156 and slamming the connecting 
door shut, locking it. Gary opened the outside door, glanced out, stood back 
as 
Harley took a look out. Then Harley, gun in hand, ran past Gary. 

Peering around the doorsill into Room 154, gun aimed in, Harley said, "Drop 
it." 

A shot answered him, smashing into his car where it stood parked in front of 
the 
door. Harley fired an answering shot and ducked back. Two more wild shots 
sounded from Room 154, with no provocation. "Lucky he favors knives," Harley 
muttered to Gary. "No aim. Get me a pillow." 

Gary opened and closed his fists, then, blowing out breath, went to get a 
pillow. 

A head poked out of room 152. Harley gestured the man away, hoping he would 
take 
the hint and hoof it out of range. He glanced behind him, saw someone else 
peering out. He flashed his badge and the person ducked out of sight. 

Gary handed him a pillow. Harley held it out in front of 154's open door, 
attracting two more shots. 

Harley jerked the pillow back, whispered to Gary, "Sound like a service 
revolver?" 

"Uh-huh." 

"Six shots. With the one he used to shoot open the door, that should do it. I 
think Mac carried a revolver. You think he knows how to reload?" 

"He always used knives," Gary said, his voice flat and harsh. He noticed the 
police cruiser pulled up behind Harley's. The heat inside him was making him 
light-headed. He was having trouble paying attention, finding it impossible to 
drop down into the cool, calculating mindset he had used when police work had 
demanded it before. 

"I'm pretty sure I winged him," Harley muttered. He edged close to the door 
and 
yelled, "Throw the gun out or I'll open fire."

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Sounds of movement, the skitter of a wheel on one of the beds as the furniture 
shifted. 

"Come on," Harley said, "we have you trapped, and you're out of bullets. What 
are you going to do? Might as well give up." 

The revolver clattered out the door to land on the concrete walkway outside. 

"Okay. I'll be coming in now," said Harley. "Don't do anything foolish." He 
peeked around the edge of the door. The sound of a rifle cocking sent him 
jumping back. The rifle blast smashed the grill of his car. 

Two more cruisers pulled up, lights revolving, sirens silent. Car doors 
opened, 
cops hiding behind them. "Got him trapped in room 154," Harley yelled, "but 
he's 
got a rifle. Stay out of the line of fire." 

He turned to Gary. "Get D.J.. out of here," he said. 

Gary wanted to argue. He flexed his fists, wishing Morgan had more muscle, 
Gary 
wanted to get his hands around Chase's neck, watch as the life left his body. 
How could he trust Harley to get Chaise, when Gary couldn't even trust 
himself? 
He had known Chase was going to kill him, but he had given Chase the 
information 
he wanted anyway. He knew he would have done anything Chase asked in the end, 
just to get the pain to stop. 

He needed to destroy Chase. He never wanted to face that dark weak place in 
himself again. 

"Get her out of here," Harley said again. 

Gary closed his eyes. The rage was so hot inside him he couldn't think 
straight. 
"Come on," whispered Valerie, "Consider Doro. Life's more important." In the 
dark stage that was Morgan's mind, Valerie reached out and touched Gary's 
forehead. Her fingertips were cool. The red rage ran out of his soles as cool 
flowed from her hand. Gary took a deep breath, nodded to Harley, then went to 
knock on the bathroom door. "Come on, Doro, we have to run." 

"Is it really you?" 

"Who else? Come on!" 

She opened the door a crack and looked out, towel rod at the ready. He grabbed 
her wrist and pulled her out the door. They ran away from the room where Chase 
was trapped and around the side of the building. 

"Where are we going?" she demanded, still gripping the towel rod. "What are we 
doing? All we need is a tank. We could ram fight through the building and run 
over him. Turn him into slime." Her breath was coming in ragged gasps and her 
face was bright red. 

Gary said, "It's almost over. He's trapped. He's got to surrender or he's 
going 
to die." His voice was tight with residual rage. He still felt a terrible need 
to go back, walk into the hail of fire, and take Chase out himself.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

"We can't leave now!" D.J. said. 

"We can't help, Doro. Somebody else will do it." 

"What if they don't? What if he gets away again?" A tear streaked down her 
face. 
"What if it starts all over?" 

He took a deep breath and let it out, then gathered her into his arms, wishing 
he had Valerie's healing touch, wishing Doro's arguments didn't echo his own. 
He 
could feel how stiff and tight she was, but after a long moment her shoulders 
eased, relaxed. 

"I hope he dies," she whispered. "Can't trust prison to hold him. I don't 
think 
I could stand it if this happened again. I'd kill myself first." 

"Sometimes that's not a final solution," Saul muttered. 

"Shut up," Clift said. "Deej, we have to delegate this time. Lord knows we're 
used to that. We have to trust somebody else to do the job for us." 

After a silent moment, she said, "I just want it to be over." 

They stood quiet for a little while, and then he sighed and released her. He 
said, "Let's go to the motel office, get the evacuation of the other rooms in 
motion." 

D.J. sat in the waiting area of the motel office drinking instant Sanka and 
trying to relax. Every time she let her mind go, she thought of Chase; legions 
of "what-ifs" rattled their spears, pricking her composure. Instead of 
thinking 
she stared at her hand, watched it shake as it held the coffee cup; watched 
the 
tremoring of the dark liquid. 

Morgan sat down beside her on the fatty brown couch, staring at the police 
officer at the motel desk. The officer had a hand-held radio, and he was 
talking 
alternately into it and the phone. Tension radiated from him. 

D.J. handed Morgan her coffee cup. "Unleaded," she said. 

He took a sip, grimaced. 

Distant pops sounded. The officer at the desk tensed. 

Morgan jerked and dropped the paper cup. Coffee spilled on the brown rug. 

"Morgan?" D.J. said. 

Morgan stared at her, his eyes so wide she could see the whites around the 
irises, his mouth open slightly. 

D.J. went cold, remembering the last time he'd given her that look. She 
couldn't 
look away. He seemed frozen in position, one of his hands clutched tight on 
the

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couch's arm, the knuckles white with strain, the other hand biting into the 
couch cushion between him and D.J. 

"Morgan," she whispered. 

A voice came from the police radio. The officer listened, his eyes closed in 
concentration, shoulders hunched. Then he blew out breath and stood up. "It's 
over." 

D.J., staring into Morgan's unblinking wild eyes, knew the officer was wrong. 

EIGHT 

Harley staggered into the office and headed straight for the coffee table. He 
had lost his suit jacket somewhere, and sweat dripped from his forehead, 
patched 
his shirt under his arms and suspenders. After he had mixed up a cup of 
instant 
from the hot water in the big pot, he turned to D.J. and Morgan. 

Morgan was leaning back on the couch, his head lax, only white slits of eyes 
showing. D.J. sat forward on the edge of the couch, her face chalky, her eyes 
dark, her hands clenched on one another. 

"You don't look relieved," Harley said. 

"The fight's here," she whispered, and glanced toward Morgan without turning 
her 
head. 

"Shee-it!" said Harley. Clift's list of qualifications for ghost-possession 
came 
back to him: believe in ghosts; have a mission; violent death; resonate right. 
"They wouldn't invite him in!" he said. 

"He's never waited for an invitation." 

Morgan's jaw worked, made a clicking nose. His mouth closed. His eyelids 
fluttered, then opened, their pale blue stained with brown. "Puny," he said, 
his 
voice low and thrilling. He flexed his hands, then looked around. "Dorothy 
Jean! 
At last! You don't know what I've gone through to get to you." 

"Yes, I do," she said. "Get out! Die, Chase! Just -- die!" 

"I already did that," he said. His face darkened. "It hurt, and not in a good 
way." 

"Get out of Morgan!" She pulled her hands apart, made fists, and began 
pummeling 
Morgan's chest. 

"Hey! Is this any way to treat the one who loves you? Although it does feel . 
. 
. so good . . ." He smiled at her. Suddenly she remembered one evening, before 
she knew much about Chase. They were having a candlelight dinner at her 
apartment. She had made a spectacular meal, because she was sure Chase was the 
one she'd been looking for all her life, and the way he responded to her had 
her

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convinced he felt the same way about her. They had finished dessert and were 
looking at each other. D.J.'s mind, at least, was in the bedroom, where she 
had 
covered the lampshade with a pink scarf and left some sandalwood-scented 
candles 
burning. 

Chase picked up one of the candles on the dinner table and tilted it so that 
hot 
wax poured onto his palm. "Mmm," he said. "So good. So good." He slowly 
dripped 
a circle on one palm, then switched hands and dripped more wax on the other. 
Wondering if it was some erotic turn-on she'd never heard of, D.J. had packed 
up 
the other candle and tried dripping a drop on her own palm. At the stinging 
pain 
of the burn her hand jerked. She set the candle upright and looked at Chase 
with 
horror; he was so absorbed in what he was doing that he never noticed. She 
blinked. Maybe she was hypersensitive to pain. Maybe that was it. 

Pretending she had to go to the bathroom, she went to her room and blew out 
the 
candles there. People did have different ideas of pleasure, she told herself, 
but she didn't want him practicing his brand on her. 

Still, she had thought Chase was near enough to perfect not to worry about. 

She stopped pounding on him. He gripped her shoulders, drew her against him. 
"The hair, you have to change that," he said. "It's ugly. Not like an angel's 
anymore. But now you're a dirty one. I forgot. Now you're a dirty one." Then 
he 
ground his mouth against hers, forced hers open and thrust his tongue in. 
After 
her first startled fury, she was going to bite down on his tongue, but Harley 
grabbed her from behind and pulled her out of Chase's arms. 

"Gary!" Harley said. "Can't you do something?" 

Chase laughed. "Invoke your little police friend," he said. "I killed him 
once, 
and I'll do it again." 

"Clift?" asked D.J. 

"Detective?" said a strange voice from behind them. D.J. and Harley turned. 

A uniformed officer stood there. "They need you for testing," he said. 

"Something's come up," said Harley. He reached behind him, then turned to 
Morgan 
and handcuffed him. "I need to question this witness before I wrap it up. I 
suggest we go somewhere more private," Harley said to D.J. He turned back to 
the 
other officer. "Okay if we borrow your cruiser, just to sit in?" 

The man shrugged, then held out keys. "Right there," he said, pointing a thumb 
over his shoulder. 

"Thanks, Fletcher. This shouldn't take long." He dragged Morgan up off the

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couch 
by the handcuffs, then took him outside and pushed him into the back seat. 
"Sit 
up front, D.J.," he said, climbing into the car. 

She got in beside him and looked back through the divider at Morgan. "Can't 
you 
do something?" she asked, not knowing to whom she was appealing. 

"I'm trying Deej!" cried Clift. He gulped. 

"The little professor," Chase said. "I'll step on him like a bug. The sluts I 
shall slit from crotch to throat. I missed my chance to do that to the old 
lady, 
but now that I have another chance, I'll do it correctly. I haven't decided 
what 
to do to that pesky nine-year-old boy yet, but it's delicious to think about 
my 
options. And the baby. I don't know if she's dirty yet." He frowned. "But she 
will be. Maybe not right away. But after I deal with the others." He sat back 
and smiled. "The cop. The cop. He was so much fun the last time. I'll make it 
even better this time." 

"Morgan!" D.J. said. "Kick him out. Kick him out." 

Morgan blinked, then looked at her with his own pale blue eyes. "Kick him 
out?" 
he said in a slow voice. 

"You don't want to keep him, do you?" 

"No! I don't like him at all." 

"Kick him out." 

"I don't know how." 

"Ask the others." 

"Okay." Morgan closed his eyes. 

D.J. sat back. Business mode, she thought. Business mode. Everything has a 
place; how do I get rid of something that doesn't belong? Delete it on the 
computer. Shred the file. For a minute she visualized Chase as a paper ghost, 
going into the shredder whole and coming out as narrow crimped strips of 
paper. 
See him get out of that one. 

Dump the trash. Edit the bad phrases out of the report. But Morgan wasn't a 
computer. 

What would Dr. Kabukin do? 

What was she always trying to get Morgan to do? Integrate. And Clift said nos 
it 
would make them all disappear, and leave Morgan confused. What if they each 
grabbed a piece of Chase and wouldn't let go, though? Maybe if they pulled him 
to pieces, the pieces would be easier to get rid of. 

Shredding.

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"Morgan," said D.J. 

"I'm trying to kick him out but he won't go! Even Gary can't hold him!" 

"Morgan, integrate him." 

"What?" He sounded panic-stricken. "I don't want him in here!" 

"Each of you take a different piece." 

"No! I don't want anything he has!" "Is what you're doing working?" 

"No! We keep trying to beat him up, but he's stronger. He's awful, D.J. He 
looks 
around and everything he sees is ugly and he makes us look at it like that and 
we can't find our own eyes. He looks at us and we're all ugly. And we get all 
weak when he looks at us like that! All my insiders had ugly places in their 
vision, but we talked about them and they got better, but he won't let us 
talk, 
he won't listen, he just hurts us and hurts us --" 

"I know." 

"He's going to poison us!" 

"Yes. But maybe if you all integrate him, the doses will be small enough for 
you 
to survive. Clift said integration would destroy your insiders." 

"Destroy . . ." Morgan closed his eyes again. 

After a long moment of restless silence, Morgan opened his mouth. "Dorothy 
Jean!" cried Chase. "Never forget. I always loved you, even after you betrayed 
me. I love you now even though you've betrayed me again. My lamb, my savior, 
my 
judas --" 

"Shut up!" said D.J., fighting tears and anger. 

Morgan began coughing and choking. Harley climbed out of the car and opened 
the 
back door, standing back a respectful distance, but watching Morgan. 

What have I done? D.J. thought. If they take the pleasure he had killing those 
women, if they take that he likes pain, if they find out why he did it, won't 
that turn them into him? Won't they do it themselves? What about little 
Mishka? 
She's too young to understand. What about Saul? What if he turns really nasty 
the way Chase was? What about Valerie, what if she takes that hate he had? 

Morgan was coughing deep coughs that forced their way up from the bottom of 
his 
lungs. He was holding his stomach with his hand-cuffed hands, curling up. 

After what seemed like a long time, when he was actually coughing up blood, he 
stopped, and slumped, exhausted, on the back seat. 

"Now," he said in a hoarse whisper. "Now we're going to close the door, okay? 
Close the door."

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"Buddy?" Harley said, stooping to stare at him. 

Morgan looked at him with bloodshot eyes, wiping his mouth on his pirate 
sleeve. 

"You need a hospital or something?" 

Morgan swallowed. "Glass of water?" he managed. 

Harley ran inside and came out with a big paper cup of water. He climbed in 
the 
back seat with Morgan, pushed him upright, and held the cup to his lips. D.J. 
hugged herself, wondering if Chase would make a move, strangle Harley with the 
handcuffs, push the water in his face and make a break. But Morgan sipped, 
coughed, sipped, sagged against the seat. 

"Did you do it?" Harley asked. 

"Yeah," said someone. It was hard to tell who, Morgan's voice was so strained. 
It sounded like it might be Gary. "You were right, Doro; couldn't take him in 
a 
fight, but when we went to -- pull him inside us, the way Morgan does with 
ghosts, he came apart." 

"Does this mean you're all -- polluted by him?" she asked in a small voice. 

"Ah, sugar," said Valerie, and took another sip of water. "Not like we didn't 
have our dark sides before." 

"Are you going to kill people?" D.J. asked, her voice still high and tiny. She 
put her feet up on the seat and hugged her knees to her chest, her back 
against 
the passenger door. 

"As the oldest, I took that part," Afra said, her voice clear. "I can own it 
without acting on it. Just as you could know about horrors and not become 
them. 
We have the power to say no." 

"No more ghosts," Clift said. 

"No more ghosts," agreed Elaine. 

"You don't mind if I leave these cuffs on you for now, though, do you?" Harley 
asked. 

"Cuffed me wrong," said Gary. "Should have done it behind my back, Buford." 

"I know," said Harley. 

"I don't mind," said Morgan. "Except I'd like breakfast." 

"So would I," Harley said. "We've got to hang around here until the crime lab 
finishes, got to have our hands and guns tested -- you know the routine, 
Gary-- 
but I bet we could order something in." He went into the hotel office. 

Morgan leaned forward, looking through the divider into D.J.'s eyes. She 
stared

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

back, saw his eyes darken into Gary's. "Doro," he whispered. "I took the 
love." 

"What?" 

"They let me take what I could stand of him, and I took the love he had for 
you." 

She closed her eyes. "I don't want that back 

"It's the cleanest thing he owned." 

"Put it away, Gary. "She stared into his eyes. "Whatever happens now, let that 
be just between us. All eleven of us, but --" 

He took a deep breath, let it out. "All right," he said. "All right." He 
leaned 
back and relaxed against the seat. "As long as there's a future at all." 

Was that possible? All the parts of Morgan she had begun to fall in love with, 
infected with pieces of what she most wanted to escape? 

She looked at him. His eyes were closed and his breathing had slowed into 
sleep. 
She was tired of running away. She couldn't abandon him because he had 
followed 
her advice. 

By the time Harley was back with food, she was thinking of ways to cover up 
spray-painted graffiti on apartment walls.