The Meridians

46.

 

***

 

Mr. Gray was fully-formed, a knife already at Kevin's throat.

 

"Sixty two years," hissed the old man. "Sixty two goddam years I've been waiting for this!"

 

Lynette could not have done what happened next on purpose; not in a thousand years. But her son was in danger, his eyes closed and a knife at his throat.

 

She screamed, and threw herself at the old man in the car. His eyes widened as she grabbed his wrist, forcing it away from her son. Mr. Gray screamed and slashed downward, his wrist turning, managing to cut the back of her wrists. The wounds were superficial, but painful.

 

Lynette paid them no heed. All that mattered was that her son, her only treasure, was in danger. She screamed again, a voiceless shriek that carried with it the frustration of losing Robbie, of watching her son change into a stranger before her as he became not only autistic, but whatever...else...he had turned to in these last days. She cried out with pain at the losses of her life, giving voice for once and for all to the tragedies that had been wrought upon her.

 

Then Mr. Gray twisted expertly, and her slippery hands could not hold onto his wrists. He was free, the knife pulled back where she could not reach. He grinned, his face a mask of madness, his eyes glittering with rage and hatred.

 

"Fine," he spat. "I'll kill the bitch first."

 

And he slashed with the knife, a glittering arc that Lynette knew she was powerless to stop, an arc that would end with the razor edge slashing deeply into her throat.

 

She could do nothing.

 

She was going to die.

 

 

 

 

 

***

 

 

 

 

 

47.

 

***

 

"Tina," he whispered. The girl's eyes were screwed tightly shut, the classic defense of a defenseless child: if I can't see you, you can't hurt me.

 

Her eyes opened slowly, and she saw him. He must have looked a fright, with his clothes ripped and askew, and breathing like a spent rhino after the fight, but she smiled in spite of that.

 

"Are you okay?" she whispered. His heartstrings rang a tune at her concern: she was tied up, had to be terrified, but the first thing she asked was if he was okay.

 

This is a special girl, he thought.

 

Then he nodded. "I'm okay," he said. "But we have to go. Right now."

 

"What about Mommy and Daddy?" she asked.

 

Scott hesitated. Only for a fraction of a second - this was no time to agonize overly, not with a madman unconscious on the stairs down the hall - but still, he did wonder what he could tell her.

 

Nothing, he decided. Tell her nothing. Just get her out of here. Get both of you out of here.

 

To Tina, he said, "I'm not sure." His stomach churned at the lie, but he knew that it was the only way. To tell her that her mother was dead and her father only intent on killing her would be to tell her more than anyone could be expected to handle, let alone someone so young and innocent.

 

She nodded, accepting the falsehood at face value, and Scott scooped the little girl into his arms, tucking her as best he could into a comfortable position, then rushing to the front door.

 

"Where are we going?" she asked, her voice bouncing as she jounced in his arms.

 

"Outside. Better outside," he said. He didn't elaborate, and she asked nothing further. He was glad, because beyond going outside, he had nothing he could tell her.

 

There was a madman behind.

 

A madman before.

 

They were trapped in the middle of a vise fashioned of evil and madness, a pressure cooker that would burst at any moment and destroy all within it.

 

Stop, he thought. Don't think that way.

 

He thought of Lynette. Of Kevin. Of Tina. And strangely, the idea of the people relying on him to hold himself together and find a way for them all to survive this series of waking nightmares had the opposite effect that he would have expected. He would have thought that pondering on them would lead him to further panic, would take him further into a black hole of misery from which nothing could escape. Instead, however, he instantly felt better, thinking of Lynette's beautiful smile, of Tina's trusting and loving nature, of Kevin's eyes.

 

His eyes.

 

Something shivered through Scott when he thought that, but before he could put a finger on the thought, before he could peg it to reality like a pin on a corkboard, it fled to another, more secretive part of his mind and disappeared.

 

He shook his head, and continued toward the doorway of the house of madness and death, breathing easier now that he was thinking of the people he loved and needed.

 

Was Tina's name included on that list? he wondered abruptly, and realized that yes, it was. Though he knew her only as a captive, though she had not said more than twenty words, the beauty in her soul shone through clearly, endearing her to him - and, he was sure, to most others - instantly.

 

She was part of his impromptu family now, just as surely as Kevin and Lynette. Again, the feeling that accompanied this thought was one that held a sentiment of prophecy, a feeling of prescience that he had felt before numerous times now, the feeling that he was not experiencing something in the here and now so much as something that was sure to come. Something future, but still somehow just as real as what was going on in the present.

 

He stepped through the door, holding Tina.

 

He looked at the car.

 

And saw Mr. Gray, holding a knife to Kevin's throat. Then, as he watched in horror, Lynette threw herself at the old assassin, catching him off-guard enough to knock him momentarily away from her son.

 

Kevin's eyes.

 

The thought intruded on the here and now, another piece of the future that was almost present, but once again he was not able to catch it before it fled. Not from itself this time, no; the thought fled before the onrushing arm of Mr. Gray, who was swinging his knife again. Not at Kevin this time, but at Lynette.

 

"No!" shouted Scott.

 

But there was nothing he could do. He was too far away to stop anything from happening. Just as he had been on the day his first family had died, he was about to lose his second family to the murderous impulses of the gray man. A Mr. Gray who was older, angrier, teetering closer to the brink of utter madness than before, but still somehow the same man.

 

"No!" Scott screamed again.

 

Then he felt something behind him.

 

He turned, even as Mr. Gray swung the knife at Lynette.

 

And saw death coming for him, too.

 

Tina's father was standing behind him. Still holding his knife. Still clenching the blade that was even now swinging toward Scott in a downward arc that would end inevitably in a plunge through his chest. He had been slashed earlier in the belly, in the exact place that Mr. Gray had wounded him eight years previous. Now he was about to be stabbed in the chest, once more with the attack hitting the same exact spot where the gray man had shot him those years before.

 

There was nothing he could do.

 

He was going to die.

 

 

 

 

 

***

 

 

 

 

 

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