he was aware of things that the rest of us weren’t. He always said it was a smell, but it was one that nobody else could ever scent. I found that my faith in this man had not diminished one jot in sixty years. Adrenaline made me weightless.

“Like Warsaw?”

He nodded jerkily. A thin, silver rope of spittle escaped his thin lips. “Close now!” His eyes snapped to a point past me. “Here!”

The sound of breaking glass was loud and distinct over the hum of the monitors next to the bed. It came from the parking lot, right in line with Patty’s gaze. I jerked, startled. Then I headed for the door at a run.

“What was that?” asked Anne, pressing the back of her hand to her nose. “Does it have something to do with this horrible smell?”

“Don’t leave the room.” I flung open the door and bolted around the side of the bungalow.

When I want to, I can move pretty fast. I was quick when I was a boy, racing through the corn with my buddies, but in that strained, jolting way people have when they’re pounding along as hard as they can. I run differently now, and much, much faster.

Maggie always said I ran smooth as a cat, and that’s how it felt. Smooth and supple, even over rough ground. It always felt good, like one of those early morning stretches when you first get out of bed. The more I ran, the more I wanted to run. I realized then that I hadn’t really run for years, perhaps because it was impossible not to feel exhilarated and alive when I did it.

I shot across the dark lawn and hurdled the decorative bushes that bordered the parking lot without breaking stride. A heartbeat later, I was standing in front of the source of the noise. My truck.

The front windshield was smashed in. The side and back windows were just empty holes. All four tires were punctured, and the last one still had a screwdriver sticking out of it. The hood was standing open, and I could see bits of plastic and hose sticking up every which way in the engine compartment by the dim light of the hood bulb. I opened the door and stuck my head inside to survey the damage. A large rock sat in the middle of the bench seat, surrounded by glittering chunks of safety glass.

Anne screamed. More shattering glass.

The truck had been a goddamn diversion, and I fell for it like an amateur. I lost a few precious seconds as I snatched the 1911 out of the glove box, and then raced back to the room. A greyhound wouldn’t have beat me across that lawn. I heard Anne’s scream change from one of surprise and fear to rage, even as I burst into the room.

Shards of glass from the shattered patio door littered the floor. The pale green curtains writhed fitfully, curling into the room and falling back with the breeze. Anne’s eyes were locked onto a whip-thin man who was stabbing Patrick in the face and neck over and over again. His eyes were glassy and feverish, but his expression was gleeful. His top lip had risen to uncover his top teeth, and he was panting as his arm plunged up and down in short, jerky movements, but not with exertion.

The second man was taller with an enormous beer gut that strained at his overalls. His huge, meaty hands were ripping drawers out of the lone dresser in the room. His lips were pursed in concentration as he worked, his eyes as hot and unfocused as his partner’s.

I raised the 1911 with two hands, flicking off the safety at the same time. The gun boomed twice, deafening in the small room. The thin man jerked and twisted as the.45 caliber slugs hammered into the center of his chest and his right shoulder. The slender boning knife he had been using spun across the floor.

“Motherfucker!” With his good arm, he shoved the bed towards me. He was far too strong for his skinny frame. The bed’s locked wheels skidded over the thin carpet and then grabbed tight, tipping the bed over and spilling Patty out like a rag doll.

I dropped the gun and caught him in my arms before he could hit the floor, ending on my knees. The bedrail hit me in the head, splitting the skin over my right eyebrow. The bed ended up on its side, between myself and the intruders.

The big one said, “I’ve got it.”

I gathered Patrick to me as gently as I could and stood up in time to see both men turning to dash out of the smashed patio door.

Anne dove for the gun, came up in a neat roll, and fired, all in one smooth motion. She hit the fat one right between the shoulder blades. My eyes widened in surprise. I couldn’t have made that shot. Apparently there was more to Patrick’s granddaughter than I thought. Of course, the bag never slowed down.

A second later, they were gone.

4

I knelt down next to Patrick. He was dead, and probably had been before I even got back to the room. The wounds were terrible. Black blood pooled in weeping oval slits all over his neck and upper chest. His face was worse, with long rips across his jaw and cheekbones, the skin flayed open away from the bone underneath.

None of those wounds killed him. He had been stabbed through both eyes with that long, slender knife, penetrating deep into the brain. I hoped it had been an instant, painless death.

I pulled a sheet over Patrick’s remains as reverently as I could. When I stood up, I bumped into Anne, who had been standing inches behind me, one hand covering her mouth and nose, the other still holding my gun. She was staring at the dark stains that were already seeping through the sheet, so I put my hands on her shoulders and turned her away. With one arm around her waist, I guided her gently away from the body and tried to gently take my gun out of her hand. She resisted me at first, but reluctantly let it go.

We crossed the room to the couch where she pulled away from me and hugged herself tightly, her hands locked around her biceps in a white-knuckled grip. She was shaking, struggling not to make a sound, while tears made silent tracks down through the crease of her nose to her lips. Not knowing what else to do, I took a step towards her, but she turned her head and moved back.

I’ve seen a lot of grief over the years and decades and it never changes. Even after all this time, I can close my eyes and be right back at Maggie’s bedside the moment she died. I watched Anne struggle under the weight of it and felt small and helpless.

We stood like that for as long as it was bearable. Eventually I walked back into the bedroom, both to give Anne some space and also to look for something that I didn’t want to find. I stepped respectfully around Patty and the bed and moved closer to the window.

I know I hit the thin one twice, and even though he didn’t drop, he bled. As I expected, there were dots and strings of blood on the floor where he had been standing. The blood felt sticky when I dipped a finger into it, and when smeared against my thumb, left a black smear. Normal blood looks black if it’s thick enough, but if you smear it flat when it’s fresh, you’ll see that it’s really a shockingly bright red. This blood stayed black.

I sniffed at my fingers and quickly blew the bitter stink out of my nostrils. It made me want to spit. Patty had said it was bags. His peculiar ability to know things, to sense them, had never once let me down. Looks like he went out with an unbroken record.

Over by the wall, Big and Tall’s handiwork was clear. The contents of the top two drawers were scattered all over the floor. The drawers themselves were tossed to the side, and I could see where the rails had been pulled completely out of the dresser, wood screws and all.

I remembered him telling Skinny that he had “found it.” On the ground, lying in the broken glass and wood splinters, were all of Patty’s remaining possessions. A picture of his departed wife Hazel, broken. His Victory Medal and Purple Heart. His wedding ring. A dozen ribbons in a medal box. Some change and a couple of pens.

Looking through the remainder of my friend’s life, I could tell that these were things that other people had decided to keep for him, once he was put in this place. Patty didn’t care about medals. Except for the wedding ring, all of this stuff would have been stored away in an attic somewhere and only taken out at someone else’s request.

The picture of Hazel would have been displayed, rather than packed in a drawer, and there would have been a pile of old drawings and knickknacks made by his great-grandkids kept close at hand.

The last time we spoke, ten years ago or more, Patty didn’t have any more interest in the war than I had. We

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