Before she could say another word, I heard a sharp, guttural scream on her end of the line, a sound of pure, unadulterated agony, followed immediately by the sickening, metallic thud of what sounded like a phone hitting a hard surface, and then a wall.
Click.
The line went dead.
The coffee cup fell from my hand, shattering against the linoleum floor, but I didn’t even notice. The quiet retiree, the lonely old man my neighbors saw mowing his lawn on Saturdays, vanished. In his place, something else, something much older and far more dangerous, awoke.
Twenty minutes later, my old, beat-up pickup truck screeched to a halt in front of the massive, wrought-iron gates of the Vance estate.
Richard Vance, Lily’s husband of five years, was a real estate mogul who had inherited his fortune and possessed an ego so vast it had its own gravitational pull. The estate was a monument to his arrogance—a sprawling, multi-million dollar mansion surrounded by perfectly manicured lawns and high, intimidating stone walls.
As I punched the security code into the keypad—a code Lily had given me for emergencies—the gates swung open to reveal a scene of grotesque, surreal normalcy.