'What else would I look for?'

Eduardo hesitated, shrugged, and said, 'Anything . . . strange.'

That stare again. 'Well, sir,' Potter said, 'I will now.'

All the way home through that dark and forlorn land, Eduardo wondered

if he had done the right thing. As far as he could see, there were

only two alternatives to the course of action he'd taken, and both were

problematic.

He could have disposed of the raccoons on the ranch and waited to see

what would happen next. But he might have been destroying important

evidence that something not of this earth was hiding in the Montana

woods.

Or he could have explained to Travis Potter about the luminous trees,

throbbing sounds, waves of pressure, and black doorway. He could have

told him about the raccoons keeping him under surveillance--and the

sense he'd had that they were serving as surrogate eyes for the unknown

watcher in the woods. If he was generally regarded as the old hermit

of Quartermass Ranch, however, he wouldn't be taken seriously.

Worse, once the veterinarian had spread the story, some busybody public

official might get it in his head that poor old Ed Fernandez was senile

or even flat-out deranged, a danger to himself and others. With all

the compassion in the world, sorrowful-eyed and softvoiced, shaking

their heads sadly and telling themselves they were doing it for his own

good, they might commit him against his will for medical examinations

and a psychiatric review.

He was loath to be carted away to a hospital, poked and prodded and

spoken to as if he had reverted to infancy. He wouldn't react well.

He knew himself. He would respond to them with stubbornness and

contempt, irritating the do-gooders to such an extent that they might

induce a court to take charge of his affairs and order him transferred

to a nursing home or some other facility for the rest of his days.

He had lived a long time and had seen how many lives were ntined by

people operating with the best intentions and a smug assurance of their

own superiority and wisdom. The destruction of one more old man

wouldn't be noticed, and he had no wife or children, no friend or

relative, to stand with him against the killing kindness of the

state.

Giving the dead animals to Potter to be tested and autopsied was,

therefore, as far as Eduardo had dared to go. He only worried that,

considering the inhuman nature of the entity that controlled the coons,

he might have put Travis Potter at risk in some way he couldn't

foresee.

Eduardo had hinted at a strangeness, however, and Potter had seemed to

have his share of common sense. The vet knew the risks associated with

disease. He would take every precaution against contamination, which

would probably also be effective against whatever unguessable and

unearthly peril the carcasses might pose in addition to microbiotic

infection.

Beyond the Cherokee, the home lights of unmet families shone far out on

the sea of night. For the first time in his life, Eduardo wished that

he knew them, their names and faces, their histories and hopes.

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