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“Now the fun begins. The kind of fun I had with Maura. She died so well. I butchered her like a steer.”

“You sick motherfucker!” she screamed.

“She was good...but you’ll be better.”

He started down the stairs, his flashlight snapping on. She backed away. There was no place to hide in the windowless room. No way out except the staircase that he blocked. Nothing to use as a weapon. Only blank walls and a concrete floor and the cache of skeletons.

She stumbled toward the crypt, dropping on hands and knees, climbing inside in the impossible hope that somehow he wouldn’t see her. The old bones fractured under her, raising wisps of chalky dust.

The flashlight reached the bottom of the stairs. It swung slowly, panning the room, and came to rest on her pitiful hiding place.

“There you are, with the other dead girls,” Parkinson said.

He moved forward.

She groped in the bone pile for something she could use in self-defense. Her hands came up only with loose dirt and scattered bones and teeth.

When she looked up, he was closer. He held the flashlight in his left hand. The right hand was empty. He wasn’t holding the gun. Must have snagged it in his waistband behind his back.

He didn't want to shoot her. That wasn't the Ripper’s way.

She dug deeper in the dirt.

He came nearer, smiling, always smiling.

“You’re only making things harder on yourself, Doctor.”

The cyclops eye of the flashlight expanded, wiping out her world, total blackness replaced by an undifferentiated field of white.

Out of the light came Parkinson’s hand. He seized her by the blouse and pulled her halfway to her feet, his face materializing in the glare.

He grinned. “Shall we dance?”

“Let’s,” she said, and her fist flew out from behind her back. In her hand was a broken piece of long bone—a leg or an arm, jagged at one end where it had been cut apart.

She plunged the severed end into his face.

He released her and staggered back with a wail of pain. The bone in her hand came away bloodied.

“You bitch, you almost took my eye out!”

She jabbed at him again, aiming for the flashlight this time, shattering the lens.

Darkness.

The last thing she saw before the light went out was Parkinson pulling out the gun.

She threw herself into a corner of the crypt, curling up in a protective ball, and the gun fired—again—again—again—the shots wild, blowing puffs of dirt out of the walls, scattering pebbles and bone. The noise was impossibly loud, the muzzle flashes tinting the darkness purple.

She thought he might go on firing until the gun was empty or until she went insane.

But he stopped. He was as blind as she was, and deafened by the reports. He didn’t know—couldn’t know—if he had hit her or not, and he couldn’t risk probing the dark to find out.

Instead he retreated, groping his way back to the stairs. She could see him faintly limned by the fall of light down the staircase. She heard the slow march of feet as he climbed to ground level.

“Looks like I can’t do you the way I’d prefer,” he said, his voice reaching her over the chiming in her ears. “But that’s all right. I have a backup plan.”

He paused, no doubt hoping she would ask a question and establish that she was alive. She said nothing.

“Staying mum, are you? I’ll tell you anyway. I saw how chummy you were with Sandra Price. I watched you break bread with her. Since I can’t have my way with you, I’ll have to take it out on her.”

Another pause. She was tempted to argue, to tell him she hardly knew Sandra, that Maura had been her friend and he’d already taken her. But she knew if she said anything, she would only be playing into his hands.

He resumed his march up the stairs. “If you can hear me, if you’re still alive, then think about what’s going to happen to Sandra. It’s on your head, Dr. Silence.”

The trapdoor slammed down again, all light was gone, and she was alone in the blackness.

She felt herself all over, probing for a wound. Sometimes a person could be shot and not even know it. The tissue damage had a numbing effect, at least at first. But she discovered no damage other than small nicks and scrapes. The shots had missed.

Had she won then? Was he giving up on her? She didn’t believe it. Edward Hare would not have given up, and neither would this man.

She crawled out of the crypt. Over the diminishing clamor in her ears, she heard something big and ponderous being dragged across the floor above her. The sofa in the living room, probably. He was blocking the trapdoor, shutting her in.

His footsteps retreated to the rear of the house, then returned. She listened to him circling the living room, his tread slow and deliberate.

Then he went down the rear hall again, and she heard the slam of the back door.

No more sounds after that. He was gone.

She climbed the stairs in the dark and tried to push the trapdoor open. As she’d expected, it was blocked from above. She had no leverage, and the sofa was too heavy for her to lift unaided.

Then she smelled smoke.

thirty-seven

Fire.

He’d started a fire in the house, and the old wood, the antique furniture, the century-old drywall would go up like so much tinder.

She pushed on the trapdoor, trying to force it open, but made no headway.

The smell of smoke was stronger. She was going to die in here. Die in the House of Silence.

She ought to have been afraid. What she felt was rage.

Since childhood she’d been trapped in this house, trapped by memories and family history, bloodlines and madness. She’d tried to make peace with the past, but still it smothered her, choked off her life like the tendrils of smoke curling through the crack in the door.

Maura was right. Family loyalty was not a suicide pact.

And she was damned if she would let this goddamned house kill her now.

She braced her shoulder against the trapdoor and shoved with more strength than she’d known she had.

And the door moved. Only an inch, but it yielded. Red glare, flickering wildly, shone through the gap.

Then the weight of the sofa overwhelmed her, and the trapdoor dropped shut again.

The house still wouldn’t let her go. It would hold her till the end.

Fuck you!” she screamed.

She tried again, lifting the door two or three inches. The cellar brightened, waves of heat pulsing through the opening like the blast of an oven, the sofa’s legs grinding in protest as they shuddered across the pantry floor.

She was going to do it. Another few seconds—

The sofa stopped with a thud.

She strained against the trapdoor, but the sofa surrendered no more ground.

It must have hit the wall. It was wedged in place. She couldn’t move it.

Maybe she didn’t have to. Though the door wasn’t fully raised, there was an opening that might be wide enough to crawl through.

She wriggled through the gap, twisting and turning as she hauled herself into an orange blaze thick with clots of smoke.

Halfway out now, her upper body stretched across the floor, only her hips and legs still trapped below. She was caught on something. Her fingers probed for the snag. Found it—her blouse, speared by splinters of wood around the smashed dead bolt. She tore her shirt free and climbed the rest of the way out, snaking past the sofa, then rising to her feet, bent double to keep her head low and avoid the worst of the smoke.

In the pantry there was a fire extinguisher. She grabbed it before heading into the living room. The walls and drapes were ablaze. Everything was on fire, the heat beyond belief.

With the fire extinguisher, she might be able to get through the scrim of flame that hung between her and the front door. But Casey was still in the house.