Byrnes laid a hand on his forearm. He kept his small piggish eyes on me, though.
“You know who was up on that manure block, don’t you, boy? You know what your doctor found.”
I shook my head. I willed my quivering bottom lip to be still.
“And now we’ve got a problem, Will—and so does he. We’ve got a problem, and your doctor’s got a bigger problem. This is serious business, boy. This is murder.”
“Dr. Warthrop didn’t murder anyone!”
Byrnes dropped a paper sack upon the tabletop. “Go on. Look in there, Will.”
Trembling with dread, I peeked inside the sack, then pushed it away with a soft cry. He had forgotten about them, had dropped them into his pocket in the operating theater and forgotten completely.
“It’s interesting, don’t you think, Will? What a man keeps in his pockets. I carry my wallet and a comb, some matches . . . but it’s a rare man who carries eyeballs about!”
“They aren’t hers,” I gasped.
“Oh, we know. Wrong color, for one.” Byrnes jerked his head toward the door, and O’Brien opened it, admitting the man I knew as Fredrico. His face was deathly pale; clearly he was terrified.
“Is this him?” demanded Byrnes, pointing at me.
The big orderly nodded violently. “That’s him. He was there.”
Byrnes said, “You see, Will, we know the doctor’s been brushing up on his technique—”
“That isn’t what he was doing! That isn’t it at all!”
He held up his hand to silence me. “And one other thing you should know. There’s another crime besides murder. It’s called being an accessory. That’s just a fancy way of saying you
I sank into the chair. My thoughts refused to be still long enough to form a coherent sentence.
“It was Mrs. Chanler, wasn’t it?” I asked when my tongue could fashion the words.
O’Brien was grinning ghoulishly down at me.
“Take all the time you need, O’Brien,” Byrnes said on his way out with his quaking witness. “Get it out of him in the usual way, only leave the face clean.”
The “usual way”—before it was abolished by a charismatic young reformer named Theodore Roosevelt— began with verbal abuse. Name-calling, cursing, threatening. This then progressed to the physical—spitting, punching, slapping, pinching, hair pulling. A typical suspect could be expected to break somewhere near the middle of the method’s continuum. Rarely did he last till the third and final degree, which might include the breaking of his thumbs or the rupturing of a kidney. There were rumors that some subjects had to be carried from the interrogation room in a body bag, their premature demise carefully covered up with a ludicrous explanation—
O’Brien followed orders. He did not mar my face. But in every other way, he applied the tried-and-true formula for wresting confessions from recalcitrant witnesses.
He screamed into my face, “Your precious doctor’s going to hang. It’s over for him—and for
He bellowed, “Do you think we’re fools, boy? Is that what you think? You think we don’t know about the Mountie and that French Canuck? How he killed one to hide the fact that he’d killed the other? You think we’re ignorant, boy? And that fat Bohemian at Bellevue—you really believe some ninety-pound weakling stole his knife and gutted him like a pig? What fools do you take us for? Your doctor knows his way around the body, don’t he? He’s cut up his fair share of ‘specimens,’ ain’t he? Knows how to cut ’em up good, just like he cut off that black butler’s face and hung it on the old lady, right?”
Graduating next to hard slaps to my cheeks, delivered as a kind of exclamation point. “Don’t you think we know his game?”
Then towering behind me, yanking my head back by a fistful of hair and shoving his flushed pockmarked face into mine. “You want to see him before he hangs? Huh?” Pulling so hard I could hear the roots ripping free from my scalp.
“You start talkin’, you miserable pup. You was with him; you saw it. Say you saw it. Say it!”
He slammed his fist into my solar plexus. I folded over in the chair and fell into a miserable ball on the concrete floor. O’Brien leisurely stepped over my writhing body and knocked once upon the door.
Two strong arms lifted me from the cold floor. I found myself enfolded in Byrnes’s arm, pulled tightly to his chest. His large hands caressed me and wiped the tears from my cheeks.
“There, there, boy,” murmured the chief inspector. “It’ll all be over soon.”
I could not speak. I brought my hand to my mouth and sucked on my knuckles like a squalling babe.
“It ain’t fair what that man’s put you through. Why, it just makes me sick, thinking how much hurt he’s done. And not just to you, Will. . . . I should’ve showed you. I should’ve showed you what he did to that poor lady—that poor, beautiful lady, Will! Do you want to know what he did, Will? You want to know what your doctor’s done?”
I shook my head fiercely.
He told me anyway.
And then: “All’s you got to do is say it, Will,” he said. “Say you saw it. You saw him do it.”
“No.”
“You want to see him, don’t you? You can. All’s you got to do is tell me you were with him and you saw it.”
“I—I was with him.”
“Good boy.”
“I’m always with him.”
“That’s the lad.”
“I—I am with him.”
“And you saw . . .”
“And I saw . . .”
I was shaking uncontrollably in the warmth of his embrace. I had seen . . . but what had I seen? A dead man straining toward the indifferent sky. The ruins of God’s temple impaled upon a tree. I had seen the yellow eye and the emerald eye, the desolation and the abundance . . . what had been given and what was still owing. There was the heart cradled in the monstrumologist’s hands. There was the brilliant smile of the one who had danced with me, and there was the jagged teeth of the one who had ferried me into the golden light.
“What did you see, William Henry?”
TWENTY-FOUR
I was taken to a holding room—not precisely a cell, since there were no bars anywhere, but close enough. There was a cot, a washstand, and a very narrow window of frosted glass that filtered the weakened autumn sun into a kind of mockery of light, light’s emaciated cousin. I threw myself upon the cot and fell almost immediately into a deep sleep—so deep, in fact, that it took Connolly several hard shakes to wake me.
“You have a visitor, Will.”
I must have been staring uncomprehendingly at him, for he said it again, smiling reassuringly all the while, a friendly hand upon my shoulder.
“Take your hands off him!” I heard a familiar voice cry. “He’s had quite enough of your department’s hospitality, my good sir!”
Von Helrung jostled Connolly out of the way and crouched beside me. He cupped my face in his pudgy hands and stared intently into my eyes.