Nocturnal (17 page)

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Authors: Scott Sigler

Tags: #Fiction, #Thrillers, #Horror, #Goodreads 2012 Horror

BOOK: Nocturnal
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Bryan shut the door behind him.

Pookie turned back to Principal Souller, who looked less than pleased.

“Civil rights bullshit?”
Souller said. “You guys are subtle.”

Pookie shrugged. “Cut him some slack, man. Oscar’s body really shook him up.”

Souller sighed and nodded. “Yeah, I guess that would shake up anyone. But I can’t just give you a list of names.”

“Principal Souller, we have concerns that the other BoyCo members could be in trouble. Alex Panos, Issac Moses and Jay Parlar deserve our protection.”

Souller’s eyebrows rose. “You already know their names? Nice. Are you telling me that you really care about a bunch of bullies?”

“It’s my job,” Pookie said. He looked around the room. “And let’s just say I spent a significant amount of my high school years in an office that looked a lot like this.”

“As victim, or victimizer?”

“The latter,” Pookie said. “I know these kids are bad news, but they’re still
kids
. They can straighten out. I did. Oscar Woody will never have that chance. You know the students and the staff here better than we do. Anything you can do to save us time could matter.”

Souller nodded. “Okay. I’ll go through the records, see if anything comes up. I’ll talk to the teachers individually.”

Pookie stood and handed over his card. “Please call me if you find anything at all.”

They shook hands. Pookie walked out to find Bryan bent over the drinking fountain, water splashing against his face.

“Bri-Bri, you okay?”

Bryan stood, wiped the water from his face. “Yeah, that did the trick. I feel better. Ready to go talk to Oscar Woody’s parents?”

You’ve killed five human beings
was what flashed through Pookie’s head.

“Sure thing” was what came out of his mouth.

Hair of the Dog

R
obin lifted her head from the microscope.

That
couldn’t
be right. She must have mistakenly used a human hair.

She reached for the tray that contained the inch-long brown hairs she’d collected from the body and the blanket. With a tweezers, she carefully selected one that had been embedded in Oscar’s wound. She picked it up, held it close — yes, that was one of the animal hairs.

But it looked the same as her current sample.

She held them side by side:
exactly
the same.

She put the new one under the microscope. Just as she had done with the first sample, she started at low magnification to see the entire shape. The hair had a tapered end, as would be expected from animal fur. Ends of human hair were almost always
cut
, something that could easily be seen under a microscope, while most animal fur
tapered
to a point because the strands of fur wore down on their own.

At higher magnification, things got weird.

Hair or fur has three parts: the
cortex
, the
cuticle
and the
medulla
. Comparing it to a pencil, the cortex is the wood, the medulla is the lead and the thin coat of yellow paint is the cuticle.

The cuticle is a layer of cells that covers the shaft, like scales on a snake. The pattern of scales differs from species to species. Crownlike scales, called
coronal
, are common among rodents. Triangular
spinous
scales indicate cat hairs.

The sample Robin examined had
imbricate
, or
flattened
, scales.

Dog fur had imbricate scales, but those scales were thick sheets that wrapped all the way around. The scales on the sample from the blanket, however, were thinner, finer and tighter than would be found in dog fur.

This type of imbricate scales were found on
human
hair.

She checked a third strand, a fourth, then a fifth. All had fine scales, all had tapered ends.

Maybe the attacker had hair that grew very slowly. Maybe he rarely, if ever, had to get it cut. Maybe the strands were from a man with a receding hairline, his follicular growth slowed to a near standstill. Guys who were balding didn’t like trimming what little hair they had left.

Possible, but then there were the bite marks, the parallel gouges on Oscar Woody’s bones. Those
had
to be from an animal. A
big
animal. Sure, a handler and a big animal working together could account for the
damage, and the handler’s hair could have been in the wound, but with that level of contact so would some fur from the animal.

The STR results from the saliva would soon be finished. If that came back as human, it would correlate with what she saw in these hairs. She could
confirm
the hair as human, however, by finding samples that still had follicles attached to the root end, then running the tests on those follicular cells.

Human or animal, soon she would know for certain.

Pookie’s Pimpin’ Gear

W
e need your help, Alex,” Pookie said. “Can you think of anyone who would want to get back at you for anything?”

Pookie waited for an answer. He and Bryan sat in chairs, while Alex Panos and his mother, Susan, sat on the couch across from them. A coffee table with a vase of fresh flowers separated the pairs. A pack of cigarettes and a box of Kleenex lay on the table in front of Susan, but she had yet to light up and seemed to favor the already well-used wad of tissue clutched in her hand.

Alex wore jeans, black combat boots and a brand-new crimson-and-gold Boston College Eagles jacket. He glared at the cops in his living room, his lip all but curled into a snarl. Susan Panos watched her son, her hands nervously working the wad of tissue now so ravaged and wet with tears that little shreds of it broke off to drift down lightly to the brown carpet below.

“Alex, honey,” she said, “can you answer the man?”

Alex looked at his mother with the same expression of bored disdain he’d affixed on the cops.

She dabbed her eyes. “Please?”

Alex leaned back into the couch, his mouth making a little
psh
sound. He crossed his arms over his chest.

The kid was a real prize, the kind that Pookie wished he could just
shake
some sense into. Alex was big enough that most people stayed out of his way, giving him an overly inflated sense of badassery. He was also young enough to think he was bulletproof.

They sat in Susan’s two-bedroom apartment on Union Street, just east of Hyde. It was a nice, sixth-floor place in a somewhat upscale ten-story building. Susan either had one very good job or two decent ones. Mr. Panos, if there had ever been one, wasn’t around. He’d probably been a big guy — Susan was a skinny five-four, while sixteen-year-old Alex was just under six feet and thickly muscled. He was bigger than Bryan. Give the kid another three or four months and he’d be bigger than Pookie.

Pookie and Bryan had first gone to Jay Parlar’s place. Jay wasn’t there. His father didn’t know where he was. His father didn’t want to talk to the cops. Quite the wonderful family scene, really. Issac Moses was next on the list, but for now, Pookie and Bryan had to deal with an uncooperative,
arrogant Alex Panos. Alex didn’t seem all that put out by his gang-mate’s death.

“Try to understand,” Pookie said. “This was a particularly brutal murder. You don’t usually see this kind of thing unless there’s motivation.
Personal
motivation. Have you guys had run-ins with other gangs? Latin Cobras? Anyone like that?”

“I got nothin’ to say,” Alex said. “I’m a minor and I haven’t done anything, so I can tell you both to go and fuck yourselves. What do you think of that?”

Bryan leaned forward. “What do I think? I think your buddy is dead.”

Alex shrugged, looked away. “So Oscar wasn’t tough enough. Not my problem.”

Pookie saw anger in the boy’s eyes. Oscar’s death clearly
was
Alex’s problem. Alex probably thought he was going to find the killers himself.

“You don’t get it,” Bryan said. “Oscar’s arm was ripped off his body. They cut his belly open, pulled out his intestines.”

Susan covered her mouth with the tissue. “Oh my God.”

“Then they stuffed his guts back in,” Bryan said. “They broke his jaw, knocked out his teeth. They tore out his right eye.”

Susan cried into her disintegrating Kleenex and started rocking back and forth. Alex tried — and failed — to look indifferent.

“There’s more,” Bryan said.

Pookie cleared his throat. “Uh, Bryan, maybe we should—”

“They
pissed
on him,” Bryan said. “You hear me, Alex? They pissed all over your supposed friend. This wasn’t a random act. Someone hated him. Tell us who hated him, maybe we can find his killer.”

Alex stood, stared down with angry eyes. “Are you guys arresting me?”

Pookie shook his head.

“Well, if you’re not arresting me, I’m leaving.”

“You should stay here,” Pookie said. “Whoever killed Oscar could be after all of you. You could be in danger.”

Alex let out that
psh
sound again. “I can take care of myself.”

Susan reached over and pulled lightly on the crimson sleeve of Alex’s jacket. “Honey, maybe you should listen to—”

“Fuck
off
, Mom.” Alex snapped his arm away. “You like these pigs so much? Why don’t you just blow ’em already? I’m gone.”

Alex walked to the door and slammed it shut behind him.

Susan kept crying, kept rocking. Her shaking hand reached for the pack of cigarettes on the coffee table.

Pookie automatically found the lighter in his pocket, pulled it out and
offered her the flame. He didn’t smoke, but he’d made a lighter part of his standard pimpin’ gear long ago — dress nice, talk nice, buy drinks and the ladies loved you. Amazing how a little act of kindness like lighting a cigarette could break the ice, show a woman that you were interested. If you didn’t mind kissing an ashtray, lighters got you laid.

She took a drag, then set the tissue on the table. Pookie and Bryan waited, quietly. Susan composed herself quickly; quickly enough that Pookie could tell crying over Alex was a regular occurrence.

“I’m sorry about him,” she said. “He’s … hard to control.”

“Yes, ma’am,” Pookie said. “Teenage boys can be difficult. I know I was.”

She sniffed, smiled, ran her fingers through her hair. Pookie knew that gesture as well, and it saddened him — her son was in serious trouble, his friend had been murdered and Susan Panos was still concerned about her looks. Were this some random night, were Pookie out for a beer instead of investigating a murder, he would have instantly put his chances of taking Susan Panos home at about 75 percent.

“I knew Oscar,” she said. “He’s been Alex’s friend since they were in grade school. He was a good kid, until …”

Her words trailed off. It had to be hard to know that a nice kid had traveled down the wrong path because he hung out with the wrong people, and that
your son
was among the wrong people in question.

“Missus Panos,” Pookie said, “we know Alex is in a gang. A small one, but still a gang. Do you know anyone who would want to hurt your son and his friends?”

She sniffed, shook her head.

Bryan coughed, a wet, rattling thing. He grabbed two tissues from the table and wiped his mouth.

“How about
payback
?” he said. “How about any of the kids that BoyCo victimized?” Bryan’s words and tone were harsh and unforgiving. He clearly blamed Susan for letting Alex grow up to be such a flaming prick. Bryan
would
feel like that: he grew up with a perfect family. Bryan had lost his mom as a kid, but until she died she’d loved him. His father still worshipped the ground he walked on. People from perfect families have a hard time understanding the concept that sometimes, no matter what parents do, some kids just go bad.

Back in the day, Pookie had been heading down the same road as Alex. Pookie’s parents were great — loving, attentive, supportive — but Pookie just grew too big too fast. He’d been a bully. He’d enjoyed the power, enjoyed making other kids afraid of him, right up until he screwed with the
wrong guy and got his ass kicked.
Shamus Jones
. Who the hell names their kid
Shamus
? Apparently it was akin to naming your boy
Sue
, because once Pookie started in with Shamus it turned out Shamus not only knew how to fight, he knew how to fight dirty. It was the first time Pookie had been beaten with a lead pipe. It also turned out to be the last — broken ribs, a concussion and a night in the hospital proved to be fantastic learning aids.

“Anyone?” Bryan said. “Any of those kids your son beat up, any of them stand out?”

Susan took a drag on her cigarette, blew it out of the corner of her mouth away from Pookie and Bryan — that strange “courtesy” smokers seem to think helps. She picked up the wad of Kleenex. She shrugged. “Alex is just a boy. Boys get into fights.”

Pookie pulled two fresh tissues out of the box on the table and offered them to Susan. She seemed to see the disintegrating wad in her hand for the first time. She put that in her pocket, then smiled as she took the fresh tissues.

“Missus Panos,” Pookie said, “any information you can give us could help. Nothing is too trivial.”

“It’s
Susie
, not
Missus Panos
. I haven’t seen Alex’s father in five years. Look, this isn’t the first time cops have talked to me about my son, okay? He’s a wild kid. Uncontrollable. Sometimes he’s gone for days.”

Pookie nodded. “And when he is, where does he go?”

“I don’t know.”

“Bullshit,” Bryan said. “How can you not know?”

“Bryan” — Pookie held up a hand to cut him off — “not now.” He turned back to Susie. “Ma’am, where does your son go?”

“I told you, I don’t know. He’s got girlfriends. I’ve never met them, but I know he stays at their places. And no, I don’t even know their names. I can’t control that boy. He’s too big, too … 
mean
. Sometimes he comes home when he needs money or food or clothes. The rest of the time … look, I have to work two jobs, okay? Sometimes I pick up extra shifts. I’m gone twenty hours at a time. I gotta do it, we need the money. If Alex doesn’t want to come home, I can’t make him.”

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