‘All right,’ Ben said. He got up and went to the window,’ trying to set his thoughts in order. They didn’t go well. As he had told Susan, things seemed to have a way of getting out of hand.
He was looking toward the Marsten House.
‘Matt, do you know what’s going to happen to you if you even let out a whisper of what you’ve told me?’ Matt didn’t answer.
‘People are going to start tapping their foreheads behind your back when you go by in the street. Little kids are going to get out their Halloween wax teeth when they see you coming and jump out and yell
‘They wouldn’t. They know me.’
Ben turned from the window. ‘Who do they know? A funny old duck who lives alone out on Taggart Stream Road. Just the fact that you’re not married is apt to make them believe you’ve got a screw loose anyway. And what backup can I give you? I saw the body but nothing else. Even if I had, they would just say I was an outsider. They would even get around to telling each other we were a couple of queers and, this was the way we got our kicks.’
Matt was looking at him with slowly dawning horror.
‘One word, Matt. That’s all it will take to finish you in salem’s Lot.’
‘So there’s nothing to be done.’
‘Yes, there is. You have a certain theory about who-or what-killed Mike Ryerson. The theory is relatively simple to prove or disprove, I think. I’m in a hell of a fix. I can’t believe you’re crazy, but I can’t believe that Danny Glick came back from the dead and sucked Mike Ryerson’s blood for a whole week before killing him, either. But I’m going to put the idea to the test. And you’ve got to help.’
‘How?’
‘Call your doctor, Cody is his name? Then call Parkins Gillespie. Let the machinery take over. Tell your story just as though you I d never heard a thing in the night. You went into Dell’s and sat down with Mike. He said he’d been feeling sick since last Sunday. You invited him home with you. You went in to check him around three-thirty this morning, couldn’t wake him, and called me.’
‘That’s all?’
‘That’s it. When you speak to Cody, don’t even say he’s dead.’
‘Not dead-’
‘Christ, how do we know he
‘That bothers you as much as it does me, doesn’t it?’
‘Yes, it bothers me,’ Ben admitted. ‘He looks like a goddamn waxwork.’
‘All right,’ Matt said. ‘You’re talking sense… as much as anyone can in a business like this. I guess I sounded nuts, at that.’
Ben started to deprecate, but Matt waved it off. ‘But suppose… just hypothetically… that my first suspicion is right? Would you want even the remotest possibility in the back of your mind? The possibility that Mike might… come back?’
‘As I said, that theory is easy enough to prove or disprove. And it isn’t what bothers me about all this.’
‘What is?’
‘Just a minute. First things first. Proving or disproving it ought to be no more than an exercise in logic-ruling out possibilities. First possibility: Mike died of some disease a virus or something. How do you confirm that or rule it out?’
Matt shrugged. ‘Medical examination, I suppose.’
‘Exactly. And the same method to confirm or rule out foul play. If somebody poisoned him or shot him or got him to eat a piece of fudge with a bundle of wires in it-’
‘Murder has gone undetected before.’
‘Sure it has. But I’ll bet on the medical examiner.’
‘And if the medical examiner’s verdict is 'unknown cause'?’
‘Then,’ Ben said deliberately, ‘we can visit the grave after the funeral and see if he rises. If he does-which I can’t conceive of-we’ll know. If he doesn’t, we’re faced with the thing that bothers me.’
‘The fact of my insanity,’ Matt said slowly. ‘Ben, I swear on my mother’s name that those marks were there, that I heard the window go up, that-’
‘I believe you,’ Ben said quietly.
Matt stopped. His expression was that of a man who has braced himself for a crash that never came.
‘You do?’ he said uncertainly.
‘To put it another way, I refuse to believe that you’re crazy or had a hallucination. I had an experience once… an experience that had to do with that damned house on the hill… that makes me extremely sympathetic to people whose stories seem utterly insane in light of rational knowledge. I’ll tell you about that, one day.’