Read Walkers Online

Authors: Gary Brandner

Walkers (11 page)

When he got back to the Marina Village, Hovde gave no attention to the graceful parade of boats heading out the channel toward the ocean. He hurried into his apartment, fighting against a growing, irrational sense of urgency. He looked through his notebook and found Joana Raitt's telephone number. He punched it out on the pushbuttons, then sat trying to decide what he would say to her. In spite of his better judgment, he was involved in this thing now, and he had to do what he could to help Joana. To warn her.

The receiver burred repeatedly in his ear. After ten rings he gave up. She was not at home. Hovde left his apartmentand hurried around to the poolside. There lithe-bodied young men and women played happily in the water where this nightmare had begun three days ago. The doctor ignored them and jogged across the tiled deck to Glen Early's apartment. He pushed the buzzer, leaned on it, but there was no response from inside.

All right, he had done everything he could. Whatever happened from now on, he need feel no guilt. He walked slowly past the pool and back to his own apartment. He closed the sliding glass door between him and the tennis players and drew the draperies.

He sat down and tried to concentrate on the medical journals he had set aside earlier. It was no good, the printed words would not combine into coherent sentences. They swam finally before his eyes, and he saw in his mind Yvonne Carlson, all pallid skin and glittery eyes, walking... walking.

Chapter 11

Peter Landau stood in front of the bathroom mirror and examined his reflection critically. It was Saturday night and he was freshly shaved and powdered, anointed with just a touch of a musky but masculine cologne. His teeth gleamed, his hair was blow-dried and gently sprayed into place. He should look like a million dollars. So why were those worry lines showing up around his eyes?

He clumped back out to the living room and dropped into the acrylic-fur recliner. Why, oh why, he asked himself again, did he ever get involved with Joana Raitt and her crazy tale of life after death? All he wanted was a little fooling around. Instead he got a whole truckload of trouble.

Ever since Thursday, when she had been here, there had been nothing but bad vibes. The readings he did for his regular clients had been mere recitations, delivered with none of his usual panache. It did not matter what he was working with—astrology, palmistry, the crystal, the Tarot—ominous shadows kept getting in the way of the glib nonsense he usually gave out. It was especially bad with the Tarot. A couple of his ladies had told him he didn't seem to be up to his usual form. He had passed it off as a touch of the flu, but if he didn't straighten out his act soon, his business would begin to suffer.

The shadows intruded on his personal life too. Tonight he had a date with an authentic
Playboy
centerfold named Susu. They were going to a party at Hugh Hefner's mansion in Holmby Hills. Ordinarily the prospect would have had Peter walking around six inches off the floor. Tonight he just felt like hell.

With a sigh he cranked the recliner forward and stood up. He went over to the table where the deck of Tarot cards rested. He shuffled, cut, and laid out the Keltic cross for himself. It was perhaps the twentieth time he had laid out the Tarot since Joana left Thursday. He was not enjoying it now the way he used to, as a game and mental exercise. Now it was real, and he hated it. There was a message for him in the damned cards, if only he could read it. All the years of rattling off phony interpretations for his ladies had blunted his sensitivities.

He stared down at the ten cards he had turned up to go with his own card, The Magician. They were all there this time, the ones that kept turning up. The Queen of Cups, The Tower, The Hanged Man, and Death. They were not always in the same positions, and sometimes one or more of them did not appear, but there was one card he could always count on seeing. Death.

An automobile horn honked several times down in the street. Peter ignored it and continued to stare gloomily at the cards.

All right, go over it once again. The Queen of Cups, that was Joana. She was somehow bound to his own future. The Tower, bad news no matter how you looked at it. The Hanged Man, hard to say what that one meant, but it was not a card to calm a man's nerves. And finally, Death. Plain enough, that one. But whose death, for Christ's sake? And when? More questions than answers.

High heels clattered outside on the wooden steps. The door buzzer sounded.

"It's open," Peter called, without looking up from the cards.

The door was flung in and a spectacular blonde girl marched into the room.

"Hello, Susu," Peter said.

The girl stood posing with her hands on nicely rounded hips. Her feet were angled in the classic model's stance. The electric-blue dress she wore was slit to show several yards of thigh. Above, her bosom threatened to spill out at the first sudden movement. "Didn't you hear me honk?" she demanded.

"I heard you." Peter stayed in the chair, looking at her. A million dollars worth of golden hair and china-blue eyes with a body that would stop a train, and he couldn't even get interested. What a hell of a Saturday night this was going to be.

"Well, come
on
, then. Are we going out tonight or not?"

"I've had a couple qf really rough days, Susu. How would it be if we just stayed in tonight? We'll have a pizza delivered, listen to some music, watch TV. There's a good flick on the Z Channel."

"You're putting me on, aren't you. You're having a little fun with Susu."

"No, seriously, I just don't feel up to a big noisy evening."

Susu's blue eyes widened dangerously. "Well, isn't that a hell of a note. Ever since we met you've been going, 'Hey, get me into a party at Hefner's place.' So finally I go and do it, and let me tell you it wasn't easy. Hef doesn't let just anybody come to his parties, you know."

"I know he doesn't," Peter broke in, "and I appreciate the trouble you went to."

Susu continued as though he hadn't spoken. "When Hef invites a girl to come, he usually means the girl, period. So I hint around and hint around, and finally he says okay I can bring a friend. And what do I get from you?" She made her voice low and petulant, 'Let's stay home and eat pizza and watch TV.' What kind of crap is that?"

Peter gazed levelly at her from the Stratolounger. "I told you, Susu, I just don't feel up to it. What more can I say?"

"And I thought you were a swinger. Shit, you're ready for Leisure World, that's what you are. Turn on Lawrence Welk, why don't you? That's your speed."

"Look, sweetie, why don't you just go on to the party and quit chipping at me."

"You want me to go to Hugh Hefner's party by myself after I made such a big deal about bringing a friend?"

"I'm sure he'll let you in."

"You bet your ass he'll let me in. That's not the point."

"Or take somebody else if you want to."

"I might just
do
that, Mr. Swinger."

"Goodbye, Susu."

She stood for a moment glaring at him, her ripe little mouth pushed into an unattractive pout. Then she spun around and flounced out of the house, giving him a last saucy twitch of her delectable behind.

Peter sat listening gloomily as Susu's heels clattered down the wooden stairs. Maybe she was right. Maybe he was flat getting old. After thirty a man ought to make some adjustments in his life style. Settle down, sink some roots. Anyway, it was a damn shame to waste Susu that way.

He levered himself out of the chair and walked over to the window. Down below, the street was dark, with only a faint glow from the street light on the corner of Laurel Canyon Boulevard. Susu's taillights were just disappearing. Symbolic, Peter thought heavily, and turned away.

The Tarot cards were still spread out on the low table. With a sigh, Peter sat down. He scooped up the pack and began to shuffle, then stopped. His eye fell on the Ouija board that was propped on a bookshelf across the room. Peter had always liked to use the board with his clients because it was so easy to manipulate. Most of the time he could just rest his fingers on the planchette and let the lady shove it around to spell out any message she wanted. If the client didn't start moving it herself in a minute or so, he could easily propel the little heart-shaped table to the "right" answers to her questions. Never had it entered Peter's mind that there was any mysterious force involved in the process. But then, never before had he seen anything in the Tarot cards, except a lot of meaningless pictures.

He squared up the Tarot deck, wrapped it in the silk scarf, and put it away. From the shelf he took the Ouija board and set it down on the table in front of the love seat. He placed the three-legged planchette on the board, then sat back for a moment looking at it.

Am I cracking up? he wondered. Have I been screwing around with the occult, faking my way through for so long that I've slipped a cog somewhere? Do I really expect this stupid board with the letters and numbers on it to tell me something?

Then Peter asked himself the same question he had asked Joana Raitt two days before: What have you got to lose? The disturbing thought occurred to him that he might have more to lose than he wanted to know, but, having come this far, he could not turn back.

Peter breathed deeply in and out several times, then placed his fingertips lightly on the planchette. He cleared his mind of all nonessential thoughts and forced himself to play fair. He vowed to do no, repeat
no
conscious moving of the table to spell out his own messages.

With his eyes closed Peter focused his concentration down to a bright pinpoint of energy. In his mind there was nothing but the question
Is anyone here?

Nothing happened. He sat in the same position until his muscles ached with the strain of not moving. He kept his eyes closed. The question flashed on and off in his mind like an electric sign:
Is anyone here?

It was an hour and fifteen minutes after he sat down that the planchette moved under Peter's fingers. Just a tiny spasm, less than half an inch across the board, but unquestionably the thing had moved.

Peter's eyes snapped open. He stared down at the planchette, which was again motionless. He riveted his concentration and asked the question again:
Is anyone here?

The planchette moved again. First it was tiny pulses, a bare millimeter at a time, then in larger spurts, and finally in a smooth but seemingly aimless pattern of loops across the board.

Sweat beaded Peter's forehead. He stared down at the three-legged little table under his nerveless fingertips as it skated around the board on silent felt pads. The transparent plastic window with the pointer in the center seemed to be searching, searching.

Although he had sat grinding his teeth for more than an hour, willing this phenomenon with all the concentration at his command, Peter could scarcely believe it was happening. In this world objects do not move by themselves. All the years of pretending, all the false messages he had given to the trusting women who paid him, now came back like a cold wind.

Peter s head began to ache as he feught to keep his mind on the question:
Is anyone here?

The planchette slowed its aimless looping around the board then and moved with purpose to the left side. It stopped with sudden finality with the plastic window directly over the word
Yes
.

At this point Peter's practice was to call for an identification of the spirit that was moving the planchette. It took up time and never failed to impress the clients. He usually arranged to spell out some glamorous Greek from the Golden Age, or sometimes an Indian, since they were commonly thought to be close to the psychic fringe. This time, however, he ignored the whole stagy business. It made no difference to Peter what power was moving the planchette under his fingers, the only thing that mattered was that it did move. Now there were questions to ask, and no time to waste.

Aloud he said, "I want to ask a question about Joana Raitt."

The table made no move. Peter took that as consent, and continued.

"Is Joana Raitt in danger?"

The planchette moved at once, sweeping smoothly around the board and returning to the spot where it had started:
Yes
.

"Am I in danger?"

Again the quick circuit of the board and the return to the little drawing of the sun in the upper-left corner and the answer:
Yes
.

Peter's throat was dry. He forced himself to swallow. "Is my danger the same as Joana's?"

Again:
Yes
.

"Does all this have something to do with Joana's experience of 'dying'?"

Yes
.

Peter looked quickly around the room. He had the irrational feeling that something might spring at him from the shadows.

Quickly he asked, "Is the danger present at this moment?"

The planchette slid across to the upper-fight portion of the board and stopped.
No
.

All right, stop it, Peter told himself. You're getting hysterical. He closed his eyes again and put his mind to work. His body ached and he was wet with sweat as though he had just run a mile uphill. He could feel his energy draining away, and knew he must choose his remaining questions carefully.

"What is the nature of the danger?"

The planchette moved immediately to the two curved rows of letters at the center of the board. Without hesitating it slid along the top row and stopped for a moment on the
D
. Then, moving smoothly and with purpose, it stopped successively on
E
...
A
...
T
...
H
.

DEATH
.

Oh, Jesus. Why, Peter asked himself, had he ever started this? No, that was foolish. There was no way he could have avoided it. It never occurred to him to doubt the answer. There it was, spelled out for him in capital letters:
DEATH
.

"From where..." No, that was no good. Peter cleared his throat, swallowed, and began again. "In what form will the danger come?"

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