"Retribution."
Sobbing, Pat pushed a hand to his face, trying to cover the worse part of the agony. And he found what had been done to him and wailed. "My God, my eye, my God, I've lost my eye."
"It's not lost." Now he laughed, laughed so hard he had to hold his sides. "It's on the table out there."
"What's happening? What's done?" Desperate and cold sober, Pat dragged at the shackles. Pain boiled through him like acid. "You want money, they don't leave anything after closing. I don't have the code for the lock box. I'm just the janitor."
"I don't want money."
"What do you want? What have you done to me? Oh, sweet Mary. What do you want?"
"Don't use her name." Fired again, he struck Pat hard in the face with a balled fist. "I don't want her name in your filthy tongue. Use it again, and I'll cut it out of your sinful mouth."
"I don't understand." Pat wept it. The blow had knocked him to his knees. "What do you want from me?"
"Your life. I want to take your life. I've waited fifteen years and it's tonight."
Tears swam out of the eye he had left and the pain was a hideous thing. But still he swung out, tried to grab a leg. When his fingers swept air, he tried again, cursing now, threatening, weeping.
"This would be fun, but I have a schedule." He moved to the ladder, climbed nimbly while Pat's pleas and threats echoed up to him. "It'll take nearly an hour for the water to cover your head at the speed I'll use. An hour," he repeated, grinning at Pat through the glass wall as he climbed down. "You'll be nearly insane by then. The water will rise, inch by inch. Ankles, knees, waist. You'll be straining against the shackles until your ankles are raw and bleeding and burning but it won't help. Waist, chest, neck."
Still smiling he turned to the controls, adjusting until the water poured through the side channels.
"Why are you doing this, you bloody bastard?"
"You have nearly an hour to think about that."
He knelt, crossed himself, folded his hands, and offered a prayer of celebration and gratitude.
"You're praying? You're praying?" Struggling to focus, Pat stared at the statue of the Virgin as the water rose over her robes. "Mother of God," he whispered. "Dear Mother of God." And he prayed himself, as fiercely, as fervently as he ever had in his life. If she would intercede on his behalf, he would swear by her mercy never to lift a bottle to his lips again.
For a silent five minutes, the supplicates, one in the tank, one outside it, mirrored each other.
Then one rose lightly and smiled. "It's too late for prayers. You've been damned since you sold a life to a devil for profit."
"I never did. I don't know you." The water licked slyly at his knees, urging Pat to struggle up. "You've got the wrong man."
"No, you're just one ahead of schedule." Because he had time before he needed to make the necessary calls, he went behind the bar and helped himself to a soft drink as Pat shouted and begged for mercy. No spirits had ever passed his lips.
"I hope you remember me before you're dead, Pat. I hope you remember who I am and who I come from."
He broke the seal on the tube, carried it around the bar. Humming again, he set a chair directly in front of the tank and took his seat. And, sipping, watched the show.
• • •
It was exactly five a.m. when the 'link woke her. She shot up, fully alert, heart roaring in her chest. It took only an instant to realize it wasn't the 'link signal that had her pulse racing, but the dream it had interrupted.
And she knew it was him.
"Block video, set trace." She held a hand behind her to nudge Roarke back. "Dallas."
"You thought you could win by cheating, but you were wrong. All you did was postpone fate. I'll still kill Brian Kelly. A different time, a different place."
"You screwed up, pal. I could see you sweating when you realized we were waiting for you. We knew exactly what you were going to do, and how you planned to do it."
"You didn't stop me. You couldn't get near me."
"We're so close you feel our breath on the back of your neck."