10
It was five to seven. Ben felt tension begin to seep into his body.
‘Might as well stop staring at the clock,’ Jimmy said.
‘You can’t make it go any faster by looking at it.’
Ben started guiltily.
‘I doubt very much that vampires-if they exist at all-rise at almanac sunset,’ Jimmy said. ‘It’s never full dark.’ Nonetheless he got up and shut off the TV, catching a wood duck in mid-squawk.
Silence descended on the room like a blanket. They were in Green’s workroom, and the body of Marjorie Glick was on a stainless-steel table equipped with gutters and foot stirrups that could be raised or depressed. It reminded Ben of the tables in hospital delivery rooms.
Jimmy had turned back the sheet that covered her body when they entered and had made a brief examination. Mrs Glick was wearing a burgundy-colored quilted house coat and knitted slippers. There was a Band-Aid on her left shin, perhaps covering a shaving nick. Ben looked away from it, but his eyes were drawn back again and again.
‘What do you think?’ Ben had asked.
‘I’m not going to commit myself when another three hours will probably decide one way or the other. But her condition is strikingly similar to that of Mike Ryerson-no surface lividity, no sign of rigor or incipient rigor.’ And he had pulled the sheet back and would say no more.
It was 7:02.
Jimmy suddenly said, ‘Where’s your cross?’
Ben started. ‘Cross? Jesus, I don’t have one!’
‘You were never a Boy Scout,’ Jimmy said, and opened his bag. ‘I, however, always come prepared.’
He brought out two tongue depressors, stripped off the protective cellophane, and bound them together at right angles with a twist of Red Cross tape.
‘Bless it,’ he said to Ben.
‘What? I can’t… I don’t know how.’
‘Then make it up,’ Jimmy said, and his pleasant face suddenly appeared strained. ‘You’re the writer; you’ll have to be the metaphysician. For Christ’s sake, hurry. I think something is going to happen. Can’t you feel it?’
And Ben could. Something seemed to be gathering in the slow purple twilight, unseen as yet, but heavy and electric. His mouth had gone dry, and he had to wet his lips before he could speak.
‘In the name of the Father, the Son, and the Holy Ghost.’ Then he added, as an afterthought: ‘In the name of the Virgin Mary, too. Bless this cross and… and… ’
Words rose to his lips with sudden, eerie surety.
‘The Lord is my shepherd,’ he spoke, and the words fell into the shadowy room as stones would have fallen into a deep lake, sinking out of sight without a ripple. ‘I shall not want. He maketh me to lie down in green pastures: He leadeth me beside the still waters. He restoreth my soul.’
Jimmy’s voice joined his own, chanting.
‘He leadeth me in the paths of righteousness for his name’s sake. Yea, though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death, I will fear no evil-’
It seemed hard to breathe properly. Ben found that his whole body had crawled into goose flesh, and the short hairs on the nape of his neck had begun to prickle, as if they were rising into hackles.
‘Thy rod and thy staff they comfort me. Thou preparest a table before me in the presence of mine enemies: thou anointest my head with oil; my cup runneth over. Surely goodness and mercy shall-’
The sheet covering Marjorie Glick’s body had begun to tremble. A hand fell out below the sheet and the fingers began to dance jaggedly on the air, twisting and turning.
‘My Christ, am I
seeing
this?’ Jimmy whispered. His face had gone pale and his freckles stood out like spatters on a windowpane.
‘-follow me all the days of my life,’ Ben finished. ‘Jimmy, look at the cross.’
The cross was glowing. The light spilled over his hand in an elvish flood.
A slow, choked voice spoke in the stillness, as grating as shards of broken crockery:
‘Danny?’
Ben felt his tongue cleave to the roof of his mouth. The form under the sheet was sitting up. Shadows in the darkening room moved and slithered.
‘Danny, where are you, darling?’
The sheet fell from her face and crumpled in her lap.
The face of Marjorie Glick was a pallid, moonlike circle in the semidark, punched only by the black holes of her eyes. She saw them, and her mouth juddered open in an awful, cheated snarl. The fading glow of daylight flashed against her teeth.
She swung her legs over the side of the table; one of the slippers fell off and lay unheeded.
‘Sit right there!’ Jimmy told her. ‘Don’t try to move.’ Her answer was a snarl, a dark silver sound, doglike. She slid off the table, staggered, and walked toward them. Ben caught himself looking into those punched eyes and wrenched his gaze away. There were black galaxies shot with red in there. You could see yourself, drowning and liking it.
‘Don’t look in her face,’ he told Jimmy.
They were retreating from her without thought, allowing her to force them toward the narrow hall which led to the stairs.
‘Try the cross, Ben.’
He had almost forgotten he had it. Now he held it up, and the cross seemed to flash with brilliance. He had to squint against it. Mrs Glick made a hissing, dismayed noise and threw her hands up in front of her face. Her features seemed to draw together, twitching and writhing like a nest of snakes. She tottered a step backward.
‘That’s got her!’ Jimmy yelled.
Ben advanced on her, holding the cross out before him. She hooked one hand into a claw and made a swipe at it. Ben dipped it below her hand and then thrust it at her. An ululating scream came from her throat.
For Ben, the rest took on the maroon tones of nightmare. Although worse horrors were to come, the dreams of the following days and nights were always of driving Marjorie Glick back toward that mortician’s table, where the sheet that had covered her Jay crumpled beside one knitted slipper.
She retreated unwillingly, her eyes alternating between the hateful cross and an area on Ben’s neck to the right of the chin. The sounds that were wrenched out of her were inhuman gibberings and hissings and glottals, and there was something so blindly reluctant in her withdrawal that she began to seem like some giant, lumbering insect. Ben thought: If I didn’t have this cross out front, she would rip my throat open with her nails and gulp down the blood that spurted out of the jugular and carotid like a man just out of the desert and dying of thirst. She would bathe in it.
Jimmy had cut away from his side, and was circling her to the left. She didn’t see him. Her eyes were fixed only on Ben, dark and filled with hatred… filled with fear.
Jimmy circled the mortician’s table, and when she backed around it, he threw both arms around her neck with a convulsive yell.
She gave a high, whistling cry and twisted in his grip. Ben saw Jimmy’s nails pull away a flap of her skin at the shoulder, and nothing welled out-the cut was like a lipless mouth. And then, incredibly, she threw him across the room. Jimmy crashed into the corner, knocking Maury Green’s portable TV off its stand.
She was on him in a flash, moving in a bunched, scrabbling run that was nearly spiderlike. Ben caught a shadows crawled glimpse of her falling on top of him, ripping at his collar, and then the sideward predatory lunge of her head, the yawning of her jaws, as she battened on him.
Jimmy Cody screamed-the high, despairing scream of the utterly damned.
Ben threw himself at her, stumbling and nearly falling over the shattered television on the floor. He could hear her harsh breathing, like the rattle of straw, and below that, the revolting sound of smacking, champing lips.
He grabbed her by the collar of her house coat and yanked her upward, forgetting the cross momentarily. Her head came around with frightening swiftness. Her eyes were dilated and glittering, her lips and chin slicked with blood that was black in this near-total darkness.
Her breath in his face was foul beyond measure, the breath of tombs. As if in slow motion, he could see her tongue lick across her teeth.
He brought the cross up just as she jerked him forward into her embrace, her strength making him feel like something made of rags. The rounded point of the tongue depressor that formed the cross’s downstroke struck her under the chin-and then continued upward with no fleshy resistance. Ben’s eyes were stunned by a flash of not-light that happened not before his eyes but seemingly behind them. There was the hot and porcine smell of burning flesh. Her scream this time was full-throated and agonized. He sensed rather than saw her throw herself backward, stumble over the television, and fall on the floor, one white arm thrown outward to break her fall. She was up again with wolflike agility, her eyes narrowed in pain, yet still filled with her insane hunger. The flesh of her lower jaw was smoking and black. She was snarling at him.
‘Come on, you bitch,’ he panted. ‘Come on, come on.’
He held the cross out before him again, and backed her into the corner at the far left of the room. When he got her there, he was going to jam the cross through her forehead.
But even as her back pressed the narrowing walls, she uttered a high, squealing giggle that made him wince. It was like the sound of a fork being dragged across a porcelain sink.
‘Even now one laughs! Even now your circle is smaller!’
And before his eyes her body seemed to elongate and become translucent. For a moment he thought she was still there, laughing at him, and then the white glow of the street lamp outside was shining on bare wall, and there was only a fleeting sensation on his nerve endings, which seemed to be reporting that she had seeped into the very pores of the wall, like smoke.
She was gone.
And Jimmy was screaming.
11
He flicked on the overhead bar of fluorescents and turned to look at Jimmy, but Jimmy was already on his feet, holding his hands to the side of his neck. The fingers were sparkling scarlet.
‘She
bit
me!’ Jimmy howled. ‘Oh God-Jesus, she
bit
me!’
Ben went to him, tried to take him in his arms, and Jimmy pushed him away. His eyes rolled madly in their sockets.
‘Don’t touch me. I’m unclean.’ ‘Jimmy
‘Give me my bag. Jesus, Ben, I can feel it in there. I can feel it working in me.
For Christ’s sake, give me my bag!’
It was in the corner. Ben got it, and Jimmy snatched it. He went to the mortician’s table and set the bag on it. His face was death pale, shining with sweat. The blood pulsed remorselessly from the torn gash in the side of his neck. He sat down on the table and opened the bag and swept through it, his breath coming in whining gasps through his open mouth.
‘She
bit
me,’ he muttered into the bag. ‘Her mouth… oh God, her dirty filthy
mouth
…’
He pulled a bottle of disinfectant out of the bag and sent the cap spinning across the tiled floor. He leaned back, supporting himself on one arm, and upended the bottle over his throat, and it splashed the wound, his slacks, the table. Blood washed away in threads. His eyes closed and he screamed once, then again. The bottle never wavered.
‘Jimmy, what can I-’
‘In a minute,’ Jimmy muttered. ‘Wait. It’s better, I think. Wait, just wait -’
He tossed the bottle away and it shattered on the floor. The wound, washed clean of the tainted blood, was clearly visible. Ben saw there was not one but two puncture wounds not far from the jugular, one of them horribly mangled.
Jimmy bad pulled an ampoule and a hypo from the bag. He stripped the protective covering from the needle and jibbed it through the ampoule. His hands were shaking so badly he had to make two thrusts at it. He filled the needle and held it out to Ben.
‘Tetanus,’ he said. ‘Give it to me. Here.’ He held his arm out, rotated to expose the armpit.
‘Jimmy, that’ll knock you out.’
‘No. No, it won’t. Do it.’
Ben took the needle and looked questioningly into Jimmy’s eyes. He nodded. Ben injected the needle.
Jimmy’s body tensed like spring steel. For a moment he was a sculpture in agony, every tendon pulled out into sharp relief. Little by little he began to relax. His body shuddered in reaction, and Ben saw that tears had mixed with the sweat on his face.
‘Put the cross on me,’ he said. ‘If I’m still dirty from her, it’ll… it’ll do something to me.’
‘Will it?’
‘I’m sure it will. When you were going after her, I looked up and I wanted to go after
you
. God help me, I did. And I looked at that cross and I… my belly wanted to heave up.’
Ben put the cross on his neck. Nothing happened. Its glow-if there had been a glow at all-was entirely gone. Ben took the cross away.
‘Okay,’ Jimmy said. ‘I think that’s all we can do.’ He rummaged in his bag again, found an envelope containing two pills, and crushed them into his mouth. ‘Dope,’ he said. ‘Great invention. Thank God I used the john before that… before it happened. I think I pissed myself, but it only came to about six drops. Can you bandage my neck?’
‘I think so,’ Ben said.
Jimmy handed him gauze, adhesive tape, and a pair of surgical scissors. Bending to put the bandage on, he saw that the skin around the wounds had gone an ugly, congealed red. Jimmy flinched when he pressed the bandage gently into place.
He said: ‘For a couple of minutes there, I thought I was going to go nuts. Really, clinically nuts. Her lips on me… biting me…’ His throat rippled as he swallowed. ‘And when she was doing it, I
liked
it, Ben. That’s the hellish part. I actually had an erection. Can you believe it? If you hadn’t been here to pull her off, I would have… would have let her… ’
‘Never mind,’ Ben said.
‘There’s one more thing I have to do that I don’t like.’
‘What’s that?’
‘Here. Look at me a minute.’
Ben finished the bandage and drew back a little to look at Jimmy. ‘What-’
And suddenly Jimmy slugged him. Stars rocketed up in his brain and he took three wandering steps backward and sat down heavily. He shook his head and saw Jimmy getting carefully I down from the table and coming toward him. He groped madly for the cross, thinking: This is what’s known as an O. Henry ending, you stupid shit, you stupid, stupid -
‘You all right?’ Jimmy was asking him. ‘I’m sorry, but it’s a little easier when you don’t know it’s coming.’
‘What the Christ-?’
Jimmy sat down beside him on the floor. ‘I’m going to tell you our story,’ he said. ‘It’s a damned poor one, but I’m pretty sure Maury Green will back it up. It will keep my practice, and keep us both out of jail or some asylum… and at this point, I’m not so concerned about those things as I am about staying free to fight these… things, whatever you want to call them, another day. Do you understand that?’
‘The thrust of it,’ Ben said. He touched his jaw and winced. There was a knot to the left of his chin.
‘Somebody barged in on us while I was examining Mrs Glick,’ Jimmy said. ‘The somebody cold-cocked you and then used me for a punching bag. During the-struggle, the somebody bit me to make me let him go. That’s all either of us remembers.
All
. Understand?’
Ben nodded.
‘The guy was wearing a dark CPO coat, maybe blue, maybe black, and a green or gray knitted cap. That’s all you saw. Okay?’
‘Have you ever thought about giving up doctoring in favor of a career in creative writing?’
Jimmy smiled. ‘I’m only creative in moments of extreme self-interest. Can you remember the story?’
‘Sure. And I don’t think it’s as poor as you might believe. After all, hers isn’t the first body that’s disappeared lately.’
‘I’m hoping they’ll add that up. But the county sheriff is a lot more on the ball than Parkins Gillespie ever thought of being. We have to watch our step. Don’t embellish the story.’
‘Do you suppose anyone in officialdom will begin to see the pattern in all this?’
Jimmy shook his head. ‘Not a chance in the world. We’re going to have to humble through this on our own. And remember that from this point on, we’re criminals.’
Shortly after, he went to the phone and called Maury Green, then County Sheriff Homer McCaslin.
Ben got back to Eva’s at about fifteen minutes past midnight and made himself a cup of coffee in the deserted downstairs kitchen. He drank it slowly, reviewing the night’s events with all e intense recall of a man who has just escaped falling from a high ledge.
The county sheriff was a tall, balding man. He chewed tobacco. He moved slowly, but his eyes were bright with observation. He had pulled an enormous battered notebook on a chain from his hip pocket, and an old thick-barreled fountain pen from under his green wool vest. He had questioned Ben and Jimmy while two deputies dusted for fingerprints and took pictures. Maury Green stood quietly in the background, throwing a puzzled look at Jimmy from time to time.
What had brought them to Green’s Mortuary?
Jimmy took that one, reciting the encephalitis story.
Did old Doc Reardon know about it?
Well, no. Jimmy thought it would be best to make a quiet check before mentioning it to anyone. Doc Reardon had been known to be, well, overly chatty on occasion.
What about this encephawhatzis? Did the woman have it?
No, almost certainly not. He had finished his examination before the man in the CPO coat burst in. He (Jimmy) would not be willing-or able-to state just how the woman
had
died, but it certainly wasn’t of encephalitis.
Could they describe this fella?
They answered in terms of the story they had worked out. Ben added a pair of brown work boots just so they wouldn’t sound too much like Tweedledum and Tweedledee.
McCaslin asked a few more questions, and Ben was just beginning to feel that they were going to get out of it unscathed when McCaslin turned to him and asked:
‘What are you doing in this, Mears? You ain’t no doctor.’
His watchful eyes twinkled benignly. Jimmy opened his mouth to answer, but the sheriff quieted him with a single hand gesture.
If the purpose of McCaslin’s sudden shot had been to startle Ben into a guilty expression or gesture, it failed. He was too emotionally wrung out to react much. Being caught in a misstatement did not seem too shattering after what had gone before. ‘I’m a writer, not a doctor. I write novels. I’m writing one currently where one of the important secondary characters is a mortician’s son. I just wanted a look into the back room. I hitched a ride with Jimmy here. He told me he would rather not reveal his business, and I didn’t ask.’ He rubbed his chin, where a small, knotted bump had risen. ‘I got more than I bargained for.’
McCaslin looked neither pleased nor disappointed in Ben’s answer. ‘I should say you did. You’re the fella that wrote
Conway’s Daughter
, ain’t you?’
‘Yes.’
‘My wife read part of that in some woman’s magazine.
Cosmopolitan
, I think. Laughed like hell. I took a look and couldn’t see nothing funny in a little girl strung out on drugs.’
‘No,’ Ben said, looking McCaslin in the eye. ‘I didn’t see anything funny about it, either.’
‘This new book the one they say you been workin’ on up to the Lot?’
‘Yes.’
‘P’raps you’d like Moe Green here to read it over,’ McCaslin remarked. ‘See if you got the undertaken’ parts right.’
‘That section isn’t written yet,’ Ben said. ‘I always research before I write. It’s easier.’
McCaslin shook his head wonderingly. ‘You know, your story sounds just like one of those Fu Manchu books. Some guy breaks in here an’ overpowers two strong men an’ makes off with the body of some poor woman who died of unknown causes.’
‘Listen, Homer-’ Jimmy began.
‘Don’t you Homer me,’ McCaslin said. ‘I don’t like it. I don’t like any part of it. This encephalitis is catchin’, ain’t it?’
‘Yes, it’s infectious,’ Jimmy said warily.
‘An’ you still brought this writer along? Knowin’ she might be infected with somethin’ like that?’
Jimmy shrugged and looked angry. ‘I don’t question your professional judgments, Sheriff. You’ll just have to bear with mine. Encephalitis is a fairly low-grade infection which gains slowly in the human blood stream. I felt there would be no danger to either of us. Now, wouldn’t you be better off trying to find out who carted away Mrs Glick’s body-Fu Manchu or otherwise-or are you just having fun questioning us?’
McCaslin fetched a deep sigh from his not inconsiderable belly, flipped his notebook closed, and stored it in the depths of his hip pocket again. ‘Well, we’ll put the word out, Jimmy. Doubt if we’ll get much on this unless the kook comes out of the woodwork again-if there ever was a kook, which I doubt.’
Jimmy raised his eyebrows.
‘You’re lyin’ to me,’ McCaslin said patiently. ‘I know it, these deputies know it, prob’ly even ole Moe knows it. I don’t know how much you’re lyin’-a little or a lot-but I know I can’t prove you’re lyin’ as long as you both stick to the same story. I could take you both down to the cooler, but the rules say I gotta give you one phone call, an’ even the greenest kid fresh out of law school could spring you on what I got, which could best be described as Suspicion of Unknown Hanky-panky. An’ I bet your lawyer ain’t fresh out of law school, is he?’
‘No,’ Jimmy said. ‘He’s not.’
‘I’d take you down just the same and put you to the inconvenience except I get a feelin’ you ain’t lyin’ because you did somethin’ against the law.’ He hit the pedal at the foot of the stainless-steel waste can by the mortician’s table. The top banged up and McCaslin shot a brown stream of tobacco juice into it. Maury Green jumped. ‘Would either of you like to sort of revise your story?’ he asked quietly, and the back-country twang was gone from his voice. ‘This is serious business. We’ve had four deaths in the Lot, and all four bodies are gone. I want to know what’s happening.’
‘We’ve told you everything we know,’ Jimmy said with quiet firmness. He looked directly at McCaslin. ‘If we could tell you more, we would.’
McCaslin looked back at him, just as keenly. ‘You’re scared shitless,’ he said. ‘You and this writer, both of you. You look the way some of the guys in Korea looked when they brought ‘em back from the front lines.’
The deputies were looking at them. Ben and Jimmy said nothing.
McCaslin sighed again. ‘Go on.’ get out of here. I want you both down to my office tomorrow by ten to make statements. If you ain’t there by ten, I’ll send a patrol car out to get you.’
‘You won’t have to do that,’ Ben said.
McCaslin looked at him mournfully and shook his head. ‘You ought to write books with better sense. Like the guy who writes those Travis McGee stories. A man can sink his teeth into one of those.’