The Midnight Tour

The Midnight Tour by Richard Laymon Page A

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Authors: Richard Laymon
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minutes, now,” Patty announced. • ‟Any last questions before we arrive? Yes, Marv?”
    “Are there plans to ever open the Kutch house for tours? I mean, it seems like the obvious thing. You could have people go over there through the underground tunnel, you know? It’d be incredible.”
    “As a matter of fact, Janice purchased the Kutch house at the same time she bought Beast House. But a condition of the sale was that Agnes would be allowed to continue living there—and that it wouldn’t be shown on tours—as long as she remains alive.”
    “So if we wanta see it, we’ve gotta outlive Agnes?”
    “That’s right.”
    “How old is she?”
    Patty shook her head. “I can’t say for sure, but I suppose she must be about fifty-nine or sixty.”
    “I won’t hold my breath, then.”
    A few of the passengers chuckled, but most didn’t respond. Owen suspected that just about everyone on the bus had grown tired of Marv’s incessant questions and comments. He was a little sick of Marv, himself.
    The guy was like a hotdog student, always popping his hand into the air, endlessly ready to answer questions or ask them, forever eager to show that he knew more than anyone else.
    Every group seemed to have a Marv.
    The Marvs often seemed interesting, at first. But they wore on you until you wished they would just shut up.
    “Any more questions?’ Patty asked. “Yes, Marv?”
    “How about giving me your phone number?”
    A few passengers chuckled.
    “Afraid not, Marv.”
    Laughter and applause.
    Owen looked over his shoulder. Marv was laughing, too, but his face was red.
    Patty turned away. Ducking slightly, she peered out the windshield. She faced the group again, then held on to a pole while the bus made a right turn. “Okay, folks, we’re now on Front Street of Malcasa Point. You should be able to catch a few glimpses of the ocean off to the left of the bus.”
    Leaning forward to see past Monica, Owen spotted a patch of pale blue water through a break in the trees. But he wasn’t much interested in the Pacific. He swung his gaze northward, hoping to see the Kutch house.
    “The Kutch house will shortly be coming up on the left side of the road,” Patty announced. “Beast House itself will be on the right. If you can’t see one or the other from your seat, don’t worry about it; we’ll be parking in just a few seconds and you’ll have three hours to look them over.”
    Owen spotted the Kutch house.
    He’d seen it plenty of times before: in photographs and in movies.
    But this is it. This is really it. Not a picture, the actual Kutch house. And I’m looking at it.
    Except for the chain link fence surrounding the property, it looked just as it did in the books and films. Brown-red bricks, almost like the color of old, dry blood. A weathered front door. Just the one door. No windows.
    Not only were no other doors or windows in sight, but Owen knew that none existed.
    The lack of any windows made the house seem more strange than he would’ve supposed.
    He suddenly imagined Janice Crogan locked in one of its upstairs rooms, waking up naked on a mountain of pillows after being raped and abducted. This was one of his favorite scenes from her first book. He’d read it many times, daydreaming about being there, helping her, making love with her on the pillows.
    He’d really hoped he might have a chance to meet her today.
    Just my luck, she’s out of town.
    But she wouldn’t be the Janice he knew from the books, anyway. Not really. That Janice had been eighteen years old. A teenager, not a thirty-six year old woman.
    And even if she hadn’t grown older, she couldn’t possibly have lived up to Owen’s fantasies. No girl could be that beautiful, that sexy and tough and brave.
    I’m probably lucky she is out of town, he told himself.
    “Yoo-hoo,” Monica said. “Anybody home? Planet Earth to Owen. Hello?”
    He looked at her.
    “Are we just going to sit here all day?” she asked.
    He forced himself to

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