if I'm not sure she's getting out."
Roz turned into Madeleine, looking sweet and shy. "If you don't do it, Tin, I'm afraid she won't have any chance of getting free. We'll just have to bet on my success, won't we?"
Quentin closed his eyes, refusing to see Madeleine.
"Harder to get rid of the illusion when I'm inside it, isn't it, Tin?"
He turned his head away.
The voice was Roz's when it came again. "Let's stop playing games. The door is open. It's time."
He opened his eyes. It was Roz again. She gestured for him to lead the way into the parlor.
This room wasn't as ratty-looking as the other rooms in the house. No windows had been broken. The dust was thick but no spiders had made webs, no rats had gnawed at it. The place was still. Only Quentin's own footprints led into the room. The treasure box, sitting on its pedestal, seemed to glow just a little. To throb with inner light.
Mike Bolt came out of the elevator and walked down the corridor. One of the two cops who had run for the stairways when they first arrived was already coming out of Mrs. Tyler's room, as the other jogged up to join him. "He hasn't been here yet."
"If he's coming at all."
"Well, we're supposed to keep watch on the door."
"Wild-goose chase, just like the other night. I don't know why they let psycho nurses run a place like this."
As they complained, Mike walked right between them. They didn't see him.
He went through the open door of Mrs. Tyler's room. She lay on the bed, her eyes open. She was struggling to rise from the bed, but each time she arched her back, she fell right back onto the sheet. She stopped struggling and turned her head to look at him. "I guess she's got us both, hasn't she, Mike?" she said.
He raised his pistol, aimed it at her head, and fired once, twice. Each time, the force of the bullet threw her farther toward the edge of the bed. Thrice. The fourth bullet knocked her off the bed. A bloody smear across the pillow marked the passage of the old woman's head.
Mike turned around and suddenly the presence that had engulfed and controlled him was gone. He looked down at the gun. What was he doing with this gun? Why was he in this empty hospital room? He stepped through the door and looked down the hall.
Two policemen were standing there. Mike called to them. "Where's Mrs. Tyler? Isn't she supposed to be in this room?"
"Who the hell are you? Where did you come from? Get out of there!"
Mike stepped back into the room as he heard them rushing toward him. He saw the blood on the pillow. He walked to the foot of the bed, looked behind it. There she lay on the floor, obviously dead, her head almost completely blown away. He looked down at the gun in his hand. He remembered firing it.
"Mrs. Tyler," he whispered. "Oh, sweet Lord, no."
"Drop it! Drop it right now."
The men in the doorway were pointing their guns at him.
"Did I do this?" he asked them.
"Drop it and get your hands on your head."
Mike leaned down as if to lay down the gun. But when he was fully bowed, his arms in shadow, he brought up the gun to his mouth and blew out the back of his head before the policemen could respond. He flopped back against the wall, arms flailing. The policemen fired then, by reflex, filling him with bullets. But he never felt them. He was already gone.
Quentin stood before the box. "Why are you standing so far from me, Roz?" he asked. "Afraid?"
"Prudent," she said with a smile.
"You mind my asking you what's actually in this box?"
"From what I've read," said Roz, "it could be either the baby's heart or its head. I'm betting it's the heart. I don't think even my late grandmother would have the stomach to cut the head off her own baby."
"She's not dead!" cried Rowena.
Quentin turned to see the woman standing in the farthest corner of the room, in the shadow. She was cringing as if in pain. Or as if she was hoping to avoid pain.
"Is too, Mother," said Roz. "I used your power over that boyfriend of yours. Hope you don't mind. He was a crack shot. I wanted the job done right."
"It's a lie," whispered Rowena. "Murdering your own grandmother."
"Isn't that what you always taught me, Mother? How evil Grandmother