leaving just enough room to walk around the stainless-steel table in the room’s center.
A stainless-steel table with troughs around the edges, just like the ones in Robin’s morgue.
On that table, a white sheet covering a body.
Bryan smelled something new, something he couldn’t identify. He reached out, grabbed the sheet where it covered the body’s toe, then slid it free with a hiss of fabric.
Bryan heard a soft, distant buzz. Pookie’s cell phone, he knew, but they were both too stunned to pay attention to it.
The body on the table: naked, lean and muscular. Skin the color of purple grapes. Stomach cut open — a hollow cavity, as all the internal organs had been removed. One leg had been stripped mostly free of muscle, leaving only bones and shreds of meat.
And the body’s
It could not be.
The cell phone kept buzzing.
“Jesus,” Pookie said quietly. “Jesus H. Christ on a crutch, Bryan.”
The head had a huge, thick bottom jaw as wide as both of Bryan’s fists pressed side to side. Inside that open mouth, lining both the top and the bottom, rows of huge, triangular white teeth.
Teeth like a shark’s.
Pookie took a step forward. He reached out a shaking hand, pinced one of the teeth between his thumb and forefinger, then gave an experimental wiggle. The tooth didn’t move. He did it again, harder, and this time the whole head moved in time.
“That’s not fake,” he said. “Holy shit, man, there’s no way that’s fake. Look at it!”
Bryan
“This guy is real,” Pookie said. “And if he’s real, then I’m guessing the ones in the other room are real, too. Bryan, what the fuck is all this?”
They fell silent. The buzzing phone demanded attention. Pookie finally noticed. He pulled it out of his pocket.
“Burns, talk to me.”
A pause.
“Fuck,” Pookie said. “Bri-Bri, the jig is up. Erickson is here.”
Pookie climbed the stairs and turned toward the ruined front door. He saw Black Mr. Burns, gun in hand, standing in the doorway, using his body to block entry. Beyond him, Pookie saw an old man standing on the porch.
“Officer Smith,” Pookie said as he approached. “The house appears to be clear.”
John stepped to the side, gestured to the old man. “This is Jebediah Erickson. He says this is his house, but he doesn’t have any identification.”
No matter what happened now, Pookie knew that he, Bryan and even Black Mr. Burns were screwed. Why couldn’t Bryan have just backed off? They’d tried, dammit, they’d tried
“I’m Inspector Chang,” Pookie said. “It’s late. Care to explain what you’re doing out of your house at this hour with no ID?”
“No, I
“Sir,” Pookie said, gesturing to the porch stairs, “why don’t we take a stroll?”
Erickson pointed to the house’s open door. “Whoever is in there, get them out here
Erickson glared at Pookie. The old man put his hands on his hips. “You’ve tried my patience enough, Officer. If you don’t …”
His voice trailed off. He turned to stare into the house. Bryan Clauser stood a foot inside the doorway. Bryan’s mouth hung halfway open in surprise, like he saw something he couldn’t understand, couldn’t quite believe.
Erickson’s expression slipped from indignant anger to thin-lipped, focused rage.
A blur of motion — something hit Pookie in the stomach. His back smashed into the porch’s thick wooden railing.
Pookie saw John raising his gun, but Erickson was so
Bryan rushed out of the doorway. Erickson raised the gun and fired, getting off one shot before Bryan buried his shoulder into the old man’s stomach. They hit the porch railing and went
Bryan reared back to punch, but Erickson’s feet whipped up, black shoes hooking behind Bryan’s head, shins scissoring Bryan’s neck. Bryan grabbed at Erickson’s legs. The old man twisted hard to the left, driving Bryan face- first into the sidewalk.
Pookie tried to draw a breath, but his stomach wouldn’t respond. Where was his gun? His hand found it and he tried to stand.
Out on the sidewalk, Erickson snarled as he squeezed his legs tighter on Bryan’s neck. Bryan’s feet kicked, shoes sliding uselessly against the sidewalk.
Pookie lurched to the broken railing. He still couldn’t breathe. He rested his gun hand on the broken rail.
Erickson reached his right hand behind his back — when the hand reappeared, it held a Bowie knife.
Pookie aimed.
Erickson raised the knife.
Pookie fired.
The bullet
Erickson rolled away. Bryan scrambled to his feet, but the old man was faster, raising the knife and rushing forward to swing it down. Bryan’s hands shot up, forearms crossing, catching Erickson’s wrist in the V. Bryan turned and twisted, using Erickson’s momentum against him even as he wrapped his fingers around the old man’s hand.
Erickson flipped, his back hitting the sidewalk for a second time.
Bryan now held the knife.
In that moment, Pookie had a terrifying glimpse of Bryan’s face — that wasn’t his friend, that wasn’t his partner, that was a wide-eyed psychopath. He tried to shout out, to scream
Erickson started to rise. Bryan snap-kicked the old man in the mouth, driving him back down. Bryan closed and knelt, moving
Everything stopped. That crazy look vanished from Bryan’s face — now he just seemed confused.
Erickson struggled, used his elbows to sit up halfway. He looked at the knife handle sticking out of his belly.
“Well,” he said, “I never planned for this.” His head lolled. He slumped backward and lay still.
Pookie’s diaphragm finally opened up, letting him suck in a deep, halting breath. John stumbled down the