I'm imagining the sound. . . . I'm going crazy. IED's don't tick. Even timed devices have electronic detonators.
Besides, was she actually thinking that somebody had left a bomb in her co-op in New York City?
Girl, you need some serious help.
Lucy walked to the master bedroom doorway. The closet door was open, blocking her view of the dresser. Maybe it was . . . She stepped forward. But then paused. The ticking was coming from someplace else, not in here. She went up the hall to the dining room and looked inside. Nothing.
She then continued on to the bathroom. She gave a laugh.
Sitting on the vanity, next to the tub, was a clock. It looked like an old one. It was black and on the face was a window with a full moon staring at her. Where had it come from? Had her aunt been cleaning out her basement again? Had Bob bought it when she was away and set it out this morning after she'd left for the health club?
But why the bathroom?
The freaky moon face looked at her with its curious gaze, almost malevolent. It reminded her of the faces of the children along the roadside, their mouths curved into an expression that wasn't quite a smile; you had no idea what was going on in their heads. When they looked at you, were they seeing their saviors? Their enemy? Or creatures from another planet?
Lucy decided she'd call Bob or her mother and ask about the clock. She went into the kitchen. She made the tea and carried the mug into the bathroom, the phone too, and ran water into the tub.
Wondering if her first bubble bath in months would do anything to wash away the bitter fog.
On the street in front of Lucy's apartment Vincent Reynolds watched two schoolgirls walk past.
He glanced at them but felt no deepening of the hunger already ravaging his body. They were high school kids and too young for him. (Sally Anne had been a teenager, true, but so had he, which made it okay.) Through his cell phone, Vincent heard Duncan's whispered voice. "I'm in her bedroom. She's in the bathroom, running a bath. . . . That's helpful."
Water boarding . . .
Because the building had a lot of tenants, and he could easily be spotted picking the lock, Duncan had climbed to the top of a building several doors down and made his way over the roofs to Lucy's, then down the fire escape and into her bedroom. He was real athletic (another difference between the friends).
"Okay, I'm going to do it now."
Thank you . . .
But then he heard, "Hold on."
"What?" Vincent asked. "Is something wrong?"
"She's on the phone. We'll have to wait."
Hungry Vincent was sitting forward. Waiting was not something he did well.
A minute passed, two, five.
"What's going on?" Vincent whispered.
"She's still on the phone."
Vincent was furious.
Goddamn her . . . He wished he could be there with Duncan to help kill her. What the hell was she doing making phone calls now? He wolfed down some food.
Finally the Watchmaker said, "I'm going to try to get her off the phone. I'll go back up to the roof and come down the stairs into the hallway. I'll get her to open the door." Vincent heard some rare emotion in the man's next comment. "I can't wait any longer."
You don't know the half of it, thought Clever Vincent, who surfaced momentarily before being sent away by his starving other half.
Stripping for her bath, Lucy Richter heard another sound. Not the ticking of the moon clock. From somewhere nearby. Inside? The hallway? The alley?
A click. Metallic.
What was it?