“Okay, listen up,” I said. “We can't let down our guard. That means staying awake.”
“As a rule,” Mrs. Parnell said, “you take turns keeping watch.” Merv and Alvin turned their attention to her. “Since we are five,” she continued, “let us have two keep watch, and three sleep. Four hour shifts work best. Then three will be fresh at about three in the morning, when, if I were Benning, I'd be making my entrance.”
“Right.” Exactly what he would do. But where did she get this stuff?
“So,” I added, “who gets the first sleep shift?”
Of course, Lindsay was actually already asleep, her cashmere arm covering her face. That's tranks for you.
“You go first,” Merv said, without taking his eyes off Lindsay. “I don't need to sleep. That way there will be three of us at all times.
“I don't actually sleep either,” Mrs. Parnell said. “Never close an eye in the average night.”
“Me neither,” Alvin said.
Elaine crossed her arms. “I certainly don't want to miss anything. I skipped the ice sculpture competition for this. I don't intend to snooze through it.”
“Fine,” I said, “we'll all stay awake all night, the whole bunch of us. No one closes an eye.”
That's the last thing I remembered.
Nine
I opened my eyes to see something black, vile and smelly It took a while to recognize Alvin's sock, still containing Alvin's foot. How many times had I heard Alvin say kiss my foot? But I'd never thought it would happen. I pushed the sock away. It banged, vigorously. Leave it to Alvin.
But the noise came from somewhere else. Oh, the front door. Strange. Not my front door. Where was I? And why was I anywhere with Alvin's foot? It took a minute to recognize Lindsay's place.
Lindsay's place, where I had apparently chosen to bunk down on the gleaming maple floor for a long winter's nap. Every bone in my body complained as I stumbled to my feet. To make matters worse, Alvin continued to snore. No wait, that wasn't Alvin. Merv, his face mashed up against the leg of the sofa, issued a thunderous largo roar. In a pleasant counterpoint, Elaine emitted high-pitched flutelike trills. She lay with her head under the end table.
The banging continued. My heart thundered. Who was at the door? Would Benning have the nerve to knock? No way. He'd never make it past the cops. It must be the cops checking up on us. Bang. Bang.
“Coming,” I bellowed.
You'd have thought it would be loud enough to wake the others.
Not so. Even Mrs. Violet “I never close an eye” Parnell continued to snooze intently, bent over in her chair at a forty-five degree angle, her head cushioned by the stainless steel handles of her walker.
I was the only one awake but we were all there, as far as I could see.
Everyone but Lindsay.
* * *
“I don't know,” I said to Conn McCracken, once he had stopped stomping, blowing on his hands and swearing.
“What do you mean, you don't know?”
McCracken, his ratty little partner, Leonard Momberquette, and their cold bulky coats crowded the front entrance. Someone had left a pair of leather boots where I could trip on them. I skidded on a muddy puddle marring the elegant marble tile. My head buzzed.
“Just woke up. She must be here. Let me check upstairs. She's probably in the bathroom.”
I started on the stairs, two at a time. McCracken thudded behind me. Images of injuries and death flooded my brain. I heard the sound of my own voice: “Oh God, we were all asleep. What if Benning got in?”
As my foot hit the top stair, I lurched sideways into the banister when something rushed by me. Merv shot toward the closed door of Lindsay's bedroom. McCracken's voice boomed behind us, “Stop. Don't open that door.”
Merv yanked the door open. I was glued to his heels as he exploded into the bedroom. We both stopped. I hardly noticed the pain in my foot as McCracken stepped on it.
Lindsay lay on the bed, on top of the pewter silk spread, unmoving in the dim morning light. She glowed, pale as dust, her red sweater sleeve like a slash of blood. Her hand stretched out toward the window. Eyes closed. Merv flung himself at the bed. He sounded like he was strangling.
I exhaled with relief. I knew she couldn't be dead. Benning would never leave her so undamaged. As I reached the bed and bent over, I saw her chest rise. She was breathing. Tears stung my eyes. She was all right.
I whirled on Conn McCracken. “You scared the shit out of us.”
“You ain't seen nothing yet,” came a voice from behind him. Leonard Mombourquette. The man we're all better off without.
“Lennie,” McCracken said. I heard the warning whether or not Mombourquette did.
Merv reached down and stroked Lindsay's limp hand. “Thank God, thank God.”
I tuned into the racket coming from the staircase. Footsteps. Voices. Alvin led the second wave. He squinted without his glasses, his ponytail hung loose. “Is…?”
Elaine appeared behind him, pink and panting, her wild red curls beyond all hope. She edged into the room, banging her hip on the edge of the dresser. “Is…?”
A strange metallic thumping filled the air.
“What the hell's that?” McCracken moved toward the door. “Lennie, get on it.”
Mombourquette's hand shot towards his holster just as Mrs. Parnell lurched over the top stair clutching her metal cane for balance. “You better put your hand down, sonny,” she said, “before you get into trouble.”
“For Christ's sake, Lennie,” McCracken said.
Mrs. Parnell pushed past Mombourquette. “Is…?”
“She's alive,” I scurried to the bed and insinuated myself around Merv, “and she hasn't been beaten. But no one could sleep through this, so something's not quite normal.” I bent over and tried her pulse. Slow but sure. I brushed against a small vial near a round cut-velvet pillow.
“We'd better see if she's…” Merv reached for the vial.
“Don't touch that, Merv,” I said.
“Okay, everybody out.” McCracken pointed to the door as he called for medical assistance.
Nobody moved.
“Everybody out.”
I could have told him it would take more than that to get this crowd to abandon ship.
“Your problem. Stay here, people, if you want to get charged.” Mombourquette can always manage a sneer.
But Mrs. Parnell can sneer with the best of them. “I shall not abandon my post for the likes of you, young man.”
“This is not the time to get huffy, Mrs. P. We need to find out what happened here and see if Lindsay requires medical attention. I think she's okay, but it's better for her if you all wait downstairs.”
Mombourquette likes to give the orders. He opened his mouth.
“Keep in mind, it's best for Lindsay,” I told the crowd.
“Get these people out of here, Camilla,” he said.
I chose not to argue with him. I had my own reasons for wanting them out of the room.
“She's