King screamed out, "Michelle!"
She wasn't moving, even as Bruno fled out the door. And then the lights went out again, pitching them into darkness.
74
King crouched in the dark, frantically searching for something. Then the lights came back on, although at a lower level of brightness. He sensed something behind him and whirled. Sidney Morse was standing there pointing his gun.
"I knew she didn't have the guts for it," said Morse, flicking his pistol in Kate's direction where the young woman still lay on the floor. "Not like your
King helped Kate up and then stood between her and Morse.
"A human shield again, Sean, eh," said Morse, smiling. "It seems to be your miserable lot in life."
"Bruno got away, and so help me I'll kill you for shooting Michelle."
Morse eyed him confidently. "Bruno will never leave the Fairmount alive. As for Maxwell, her luck ran out. At least she went down in the line of fire. What more could a Secret Service agent ask for?"
He turned his attention to Kate. "Now, you asked a question. Why all this now? I'll tell you. This is no more about John Bruno than it was about Clyde Ritter." He pointed his gun at Kate. "Eight years ago it was about your father. Today it's all about you, dear, sweet Kate."
Her chest heaving and tears streaming down her face, she said, "Me?"
Morse laughed. "You really are a fool, just like your father." He eyed King. "You said that Regina rejected me because she didn't love me, she didn't want the magic. That was only partially true. I believe that she did love me, but she couldn't go back onstage after Arnold died, she couldn't become my star once more, because someone else needed her more." He looked back at Kate. "You. Your mother couldn't leave
"That's because a man like you can't understand real love," said King. "And how can you blame Kate for that? She knew nothing about it."
"I can blame her for any reason I want!" Morse screamed. "And on top of that, when Regina wanted to marry this Jorst idiot, Kate was all for it. Oh, yes, I had my spies. She wanted a man just like her father. That alone is enough to justify her death. But there's more. I've followed your career, Kate. And you grew up just like your miserable father with all your pathetic protesting, marching and being such a noble do-gooder. It was déjà vu. I had killed Arnold, but there he was again: come back to life like the Hydra." Morse's eyes narrowed as he looked at the young woman. He said more calmly, "Your father ruined my life by keeping the woman I needed, the woman I
"I can't believe my mother ever would have loved someone like you," Kate said defiantly. "I can't believe I ever trusted you."
"Well, I'm quite an actor myself, dear Kate. And you were so gullible. When Bruno announced his candidacy, I immediately thought of you. What a stroke of good fortune. Here was the very man who'd prosecuted your father for a crime I'd set him up for, running for the same office as the man your father had gunned down. Itwas perfect. The idea for the entire reenactment came to me instantly. And so I came to you, gave you the whole sad story about your poor father, and you bought every syllable of it."
Kate started toward him but King held her back.
She cried out, "You told me you were their friend. That you helped my father when he was arrested for murder and that John Bruno had destroyed his career." She looked at King. "He brought me all these news clippings. He said he knew my parents and helped them, long before I was born. They never mentioned him to me, though. But he said he was at the Fairmount that day and that you didn't have to shoot my father; that he was putting his gun down when you fired. He said you were really a murderer." She looked back at Morse. "It was all lies."
Morse shook his head. "Of course, it was. It was part of the play."
"It's a dangerous thing to believe a madman, Kate," said King.