He rose, twisted the thumb-turn latch, and started to lift the lower

half of the double-hung window.

The squirrel leaped down from the stool and fled to the side yard,

where it turned and regarded him intently once more.

He closed and locked the window and went out to sit on the front

porch.

Two squirrels were already out there on the grass, waiting for him.

When Eduardo sat in the hickory rocking chair, one of the small beasts

remained in the grass, but the other climbed to the top porch step and

kept a watch on him from that angle.

That night, abed in his barricaded room again, seeking sleep, he heard

squirrels scampering on the roof. Small claws scratching at the

shingles.

When he finally slept, he dreamed of rodents.

The following day, June twenty-second, the squirrels remained with

him.

At windows. In the yard. On the porches. When he went for a walk,

they trailed him at a distance.

The twenty-third was the same, but on the morning of the twenty-fourth,

he found a dead squirrel on the back porch. Clots of blood in its

ears. Dried blood in its nostrils. Eyes protruding from the

sockets.

He found two more squirrels in the yard and a fourth on the front-porch

steps, all in the same condition.

They had survived control longer than the raccoons.

Apparently the traveler was learning.

Eduardo considered calling Dr. Potter. Instead, he gathered up the

four bodies and carried them to the center of the eastern meadow. He

dropped them in the grass, where scavengers could find and deal with

them.

He thought, also, of the imagined child in the faraway ranch who might

have been watching the Cherokee's headlights on the way back from the

vet's two weeks earlier. He told himself that he owed it to that

child--or to other children, who really existed--to tell Potter the

whole story. He should try to involve the authorities in the matter as

well, even though getting anyone to believe him would be a frustrating

and humiliating ordeal.

Maybe it was the beer he still drank from morning until bedtime, but he

could no longer summon the sense of community he had felt that night.

He'd spent his whole life avoiding people. He couldn't suddenly find

it within himself to embrace them.

Besides, everything had changed for him when he'd come home and found

the evidence of the intruder: the crumbling clumps of soil, the dead

beetles, the earthworm, the scrap of blue cloth caught in the frame of

the oven door. He was waiting in dread for the next move in that part

of the game, yet refusing to speculate about it, instantly blocking

every forbidden thought that started to rise in his tortured mind.

When that fearful confrontation occurred, at last, he could not

possibly share it with strangers. The horror was too personal, for him

Вы читаете Winter Moon
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