"Your porch, though."
"I was talking to you on the phone when I heard it. When I looked, it wasn't there."
Then Slaughter saw what he was searching for and wished that he'd been wrong. With his flashlight aimed, he glimpsed the fallen objects in the field, and he was hurrying through the grass toward them. He stopped and stared. The horses were mangled like the steer that he had seen by old Doc Markle, like the other steer that he had seen by Bodine's pickup truck, except that these were worse, so mutilated that he almost didn't recognize them. He heard his men gasp.
"Some damned thing was out here all right. God, I'm sorry, Chief."
"These horses… They were all I…"
Slaughter stalked toward the gully. "I heard three of them up in those bushes, two more by the barn. I'd like to-"
"Wait a second, Chief." Rettig grabbed his shoulder.
Slaughter pulled his hand away. "These god-damned-"
"Wait a minute. We don't even know what we'll be up against. You say that there were five of them?"
"That's right. Like a bobcat."
"Five of them?"
"I know it doesn't make much sense, but-"
"I don't care about that. Sure, bobcats don't hunt in packs, but anything can happen. What I mean is, we need help to do this. We need better light."
"You want the sun to come up? Damn it, they'll be long gone when that happens."
"You can find a tracker."
"Who, for Christ sake? I already thought of that. These cowboys maybe think they're expert trackers, but I never saw one yet that knew enough to be able to trail a sick man to the outhouse. If we don't go now, we'll never find whatever did this."
"I'm sorry, Chief, but I'm not going."
Slaughter scowled at Rettig, then turned to Hammel. "What about you?"
Hammel shrugged.
"You don't have a lot to say since we saw Clifford's body."
"Well, I figure I'll just watch and learn," Hammel said.
"Yeah, I bet you will."
Slaughter spun to face the gully. Even with his flashlight and the moon, he couldn't see much in the bushes, and his anger became fear again.
"Okay, you're right. It's stupid to go in there. Looking at these horses, I just-"
"Don't you worry. We'll be sure to get whatever did this," Rettig said. "But not right now."
Slaughter's anger changed to grief. He had to get away from here.
"But what about your horses?" Rettig asked.
"Leave them. Hell, what difference does it make?"
Slaughter heard his men walking behind him as he climbed the fence, and when he stepped down, from the house he heard the phone again. Whoever kept on calling, he was thinking, livid. He would make sure that they stopped it. He was running, cursing, toward the house, but when he burst in, grabbing for the phone, he heard a voice this time, and as he listened, he mentally started running again. It seemed as if the last few days he'd never stopped.
SIX
He charged along the corridor, the nurses staring at him. Rettig and Hammel were on guard back at his house, and he was thinking of his mangled horses, hoping that the two men would be safe as he pushed through the door marked morgue and rushed across the anteroom to push against the second door. The morgue looked like a shambles. There was blood and broken glass and scattered instruments. The medical examiner was leaning against a table. He had blood across his gown, his face mask hanging around his neck. His face was pale in contrast with the blood. He looked as if he'd been sick, although he might have seemed that way because the neon lights reflecting off the green tiles tinted everything a sickly pallor. The medical examiner was shaking, and the man beside him, wearing street clothes, didn't look much better. Owens. Slaughter recognized him as a veterinary whom he had come across from time to time and had last seen on Friday morning when they'd looked at old Doc Markle on the floor beside the mangled steer.
The two men turned to him, and Slaughter kept glancing all around. The smell of chemicals, of sick-sweet clotting blood. He didn't understand it. He inhaled, drawing breath to ask them, but the medical examiner interrupted. "I just killed him."
Slaughter stared at him and then at Owens. He was puzzled, walking toward them. "Look, you'd better take it easy. When you called, you sounded like you'd had a breakdown."
"But I killed him."
"Yes, I know. You told me on the phone. You said that at the mansion. But you had no way of knowing that the sedative would kill him. What's this blood here? I don't understand what's happened."
"Christ Almighty, listen while I tell you. I just killed him."
Slaughter spun toward Owens. "What's the matter with him?"
"Over there. You'd better take a look."
Owens had trouble speaking. He pointed toward the far end of the room, beyond the final table where a smear of blood was trickling down the wall, and Slaughter felt apprehensive again. He started forward, although a part of him was holding back. He peered down past the corner of the table, and he saw the tiny feet on the floor. Then he leaned a little closer, and he saw the boy, his belly sliced wide open. "Christ, you mutilated him!"
"No! I told you, I killed him!"
Slaughter swung and glared. "You said that he was dead back at the mansion!"
"I was certain that he was. I would have bet my reputation."
"Bet your reputation?"
"Never mind that. I did every standard test, and he was dead."
"Well, then he-"
"Seemed to come back from the dead and tried to grab me."
Slaughter felt as if he'd heard some unknown language. The words made no sense. They didn't have a meaning. Then he understood what he'd been told, and he stepped back from the medical examiner. "My God, you've really had a breakdown. You've gone crazy."
"No, just listen. I don't mean that the way it sounds."
"I hope to God you don't."
"I mean the paralytic stage of the disease must have been aggravated by the sedative."
Slaughter shook his head in confusion.
"He was so unconscious that his life signs couldn't be detected."
"What the hell is this now?" Slaughter asked him. "Edgar Allan Poe?"
"No, please. I listened for his heartbeat. I checked his breathing. I even took his temperature when I got back here. Everything was negative."
"You did a brain scan?"
"I did everything, I told you. He was dead as far as I could tell. I started working with him on the table, and he looked up, and he grabbed for my throat. I-"
"Take this slowly. One thing at a time. You're saying he was catatonic. That's it? That's your story?"
"On occasion, it can happen. Rarely. There are cases where a patient has been certified as dead, and he wakes up on a slab at the morgue."
Slaughter looked at Owens. "This is true?"
"I'm not a doctor, but I've heard of things like that. It's rare, just as he said, but it can happen."
"But Jesus, a brain scan."
"Look," the medical examiner said. "Once we thought that no sign of a heartbeat proved that someone had died. Then we found out that a person's heart could beat so weakly that our instruments couldn't detect it. So we made up other tests. For body heat. For electrical impulses in the brain. The fact is, we don't know exactly when a person dies. A patient goes to surgery. He's doing fine when suddenly his heart and brain fail.
We try everything we can to resuscitate him. No success. He's dead. Then all of a sudden, on its own, his heart starts beating again. So tell me how that happened. You explain it. I can't."
Slaughter looked at them, more disturbed. "All right, let's assume your argument's correct. The sedative wore off along with the paralysis."
"He grabbed for me. We fought. I knew I couldn't let him bite me, scratch me. Never mind how small he was. I couldn't let him touch me. He kept coming at me. I was kicking, yelling for help, but those two doors muffled the sound. We dodged around the table. I got cornered. I was scared and lashed out with the scalpel I was holding, and I killed him."