Chapter 7: The Lie on the Table
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Sometime in the night the rain had waned and then abruptly ceased. Just
when that had been Jim wasn't quite sure. As he lay in the darkness with
his mind slowly shifting into gear, he was pretty sure that he dimly
remembered waking up when the steady drumming of the falling water
slackened and petered out, but he hadn't stayed awake then. Not that
time, waking up then was more a case of something that his mind couldn't
ignore the absence of. It couldn't remain at rest when the steady
drumming that was no longer there signaled such a noticeable change in
circumstances without responding to it.
The shift in background sound hadn't been enough to keep him awake, just
enough for that small primitive part of his brain to come alert and
insist that the rest of him come along for the ride while it checked
things out to make sure everything was kosher. Once it had been
satisfied it shut up and the rest of Jim's mind slipped back under and
he had stayed that way until now. But from the way that he felt it
hadn't been very long between the two.
As he blinked his eyes in the darkness, the rain had resumed in the
intervening hours and he vaguely remembered waking up earlier. It was a
faint drizzle now that barely registered to the senses and he laid there
his eyes slowly blinking against the gloom, still feeling every inch of
the day before and feeling that he wished that he was still asleep.
Even lying there in the darkness he felt the soreness of his
overstrained muscles protesting and now that he was awake the main thing
that brought him any surprise was that he was awake at all.
The wind-up clock that was just out of reach on the bedside table glared
at him in the pre-dawn gloom. He really was a bit of a Luddite in some
ways. He admitted it in a half joking manner whenever someone called him
on something like that. But he still did it. As far as he could see that
was more of a feature than a bug and he wasn't inclined to change.
The glowing hands slowly crawling across the clock face told him that it
was almost half past six. That meant that he had only been asleep for a
little more than five hours. Mitch and Andrea's home was really not that
far from him and it had only taken a few minutes for him to be walking
through his own door after he had left Mitch to the mercy of his wife.
Raja, the big black tomcat that kept an eye on his place was sitting on
the cinderblock divider that rose thigh high between the car port and
the walkway that led to the front door when he got there.
Raja wasn't really his cat; Jim didn't think he was anyone's cat, but
that didn't seem to bother Raja. He didn't have that scrawny, jittery
look that a lot of strays commonly had. He was a fairly big boy with
sleek jet fur and if he knew you he could be quite the charmer. What his
name really was or if he even had a name Jim didn't care enough about to
let it bother him. The cat was just Raja to him. He had been ever since
the big feline had jumped into his lap while Jim was sitting in the
shade of his carport enjoying the evening.
Jim had been just sitting outside in an old lawn chair. He still had
that habit from time to time from when he was a boy. He used to sit out
front on the porch with his grandfather then and he had never given the
habit up. Particularly in summer when the air around him turned into a
wet blanket that draped his pores in insipient prickly heat. The evening
in question he had spent watching fireflies as they started to wink in
the gathering darkness.
It was not anything out of the ordinary about the evening until he heard
the sound of a cat meowing next to him. Jim looked over to where the
sound came from and that was the first time he laid eyes on Raja. Raja
must have liked his odds because he had looked up at him, meowed to him
again and then thrust his broad head into Jim's palm with a thunderous
purr.
Jim had been drinking some beer and had just reached that point where he
was feeling relaxed and mellow so he hadn't brushed the cat away.
Instead he had let his index finger and pinky drape behind the cat's
ears and gently rewarded the cat's attention with a duel finger scratch
right there in the big feline's sweet spot while the big black cat
turned his attention to getting settled down in Jim's lap.
Jim remembered that he had said something along the lines of "Of course
your majesty" in a half buzzed, half sarcastic way and in that moment,
Jim had started thinking of the animal as Raja even if he couldn't
remember actually calling him that at the time.
Raja had a regular route around the neighborhood. His friendly demeanor
had got him the attention that he wanted as well as the food that Jim
and others he collected tribute from occasionally threw his way on a
semi-regular basis. Jim knew that Raja didn't need to depend on the
kibble and other things that his admirers provided to him. He was an
efficient and effective hunter and if he hadn't had a weakness for human
attention Jim thought that he would be little changed physically from
how he was even without the offerings that supplemented his diet.
Jim thought that Raja would probably choose one of his admirers to stay
with full time when he slowed down as he got older. Someone who wouldn't
mind when they turned around and realized that, quite without meaning
to, they had acquired a companion. But right now, he was apparently
happy to live the way he did flitting between admirers and being the
terror of the local squirrel population.
Raja had gotten up from the dry spot in between the ornamental bushes
and flowers that grew in the potting soil that was packed between the
cinderblocks and had meowed for his attention when he got out of the
car. It was nice and dry there and since the rain had started falling
constantly it had become one of his preferred spots to wait out the
storm. Jim had rubbed the cats thick neck when he jumped up on the
little work table that he kept near the inside door and when he offered
him a handful of kitty treats from the plastic box that he kept on an
outside shelf the cat had rubbed against his arm and purred loudly in
acknowledgement of the offering.
There hadn't been much that took place between the moment that Jim had
given Raja his tribute and when he crawled into his own bed. He
remembered barely pausing just long enough to strip off the damp
clothing from his body and hang the pants and jacket over a chair to dry
out somewhat while he tumbled into the bed and passed out.
Jim was wondering what it was that had caused him to wake up at this
time in the morning though. Five hours was just not enough time for him
to recover from yesterday and it had to be more than just the heightened
awareness brought on by the events of the past twenty-four hours.
Eventually he decided that it was habit more than anything that was to
blame for why he was up so soon he decided. Routine was more responsible
for him lying here in the predawn gloom than anything as mundane as rain
ceasing to fall. The good thing was that he didn't have to stay awake
though. This may be the time that he had trained his body to get moving
in the morning but it was not an absolute law carved into stone by the
hand of God or anything like that.
Making that decision to go back to sleep and sticking to it was, like
too many other things, easier said than done. Now that he was awake,
regardless of wanting and needing more rest he found it not as easy to
just do that. He lay there wide awake in the gloom, feeling the minutes
crawling by and unable to get back to sleep right away. He thought that
just wasn't right as he lay there contemplating the injustice of it.
Even though he was exhausted and had only fallen asleep a couple of
hours before, it was just not going to happen without outside
intervention. His mind was too active now to just shut down and let him
drift back into darkness.
The lyrics to "Hello Darkness" began to rise unbidden in his mind. He
just couldn't help himself. When he couldn't sleep it seemed that was
the most common song that started playing in his mind and there were
more than enough times that he had been forced to endure the performance
of his inner radio station's rendition of that old song.
Sleeplessness was an unwelcome visitor who had come to see him too many
times already. When Janine left and filed for divorce after she couldn't
take being a cop's wife any longer, it was a his constant companion for
a long time afterward; when something traumatic happened in the course
of an investigation, it came again to keep him company. The surprising
thing to Jim was not that he was lying in the bed awake, listening to
the absence of sound from the steadily declining rhythm of the falling
raindrops, but that he was even awake at all. But maybe it was the
rainfall that had been responsible for that in the first place and if it
was then maybe rainfall would be the solution as well.
Usually when he was plagued with sleeplessness he reached for his phone
and booted up the app he had there for occasions like this. As long as
there was something for him to focus his mind on like rolling waves or
falling rain, he could stop his mind from racing. The repetitive droning
of the recording would eventually do its job and he would salvage at
least some sleep from the night. With the heavy rain over the last few
days he hadn't had to use it and until now hadn't really thought about
its role in his life this week until it was absent from it.
The app was easy enough to find against the backlit screen of his phone.
He set a timer for it to shut off and chose one of the different rain
patterns there. He flipped the phone over on the table then. The light
from the program as it ran would stay on for about twenty minutes or so
and its illumination would be just one more distraction to keep him from
drifting away. He closed his eyes and forced himself to remain focused
on the sound of just the rain coming from the recording beside him. He
focused on it and eventually slept.
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When the jangle of the alarm still just out of reach dragged him back
into consciousness it was a little closer to the time that he had
intended to get up. He rubbed his bleary eyes and blinked in the
brightness of the late morning sunshine that was peeking through the
heavy curtains he had drawn together the night before. He looked at the
clock face after wiping the sleep out of his eyes and gave an
involuntary yawn. The clock said it was just a little before ten in the
morning. That was a lot closer to what he had in mind when he had
dropped like a bag of sand into the bedding last night. He groaned as he
shifted his weight and staggered upright. The abused muscles from
yesterday had stiffened overnight and as a result he felt every inch of
their protest at being forced into motion this morning.
Muscles agreeing with him or not he had to get going. He had just over
an hour to report in to Clayton and if he was going to have a chance of
not moving like an arthritic mule, he needed a hot shower and some
industrial strength coffee before he left the house. He needed to get a
move on too. Clayton may have given him and Mitch a mandatory twelve
hours, but that was exactly what it meant. Twelve hours and not one
second more than that. That time would be up in a little while and he
intended to be in earlier than that if he had anything to say about it.
What happened after that was just what happened.
By the time he had toweled off after his shower he had just enough time
to deal with the clothing that he had just hung up to air out last
night. The jacket and the trousers were still damp but it was nothing
that a few more hours hanging from the overhead rack in the laundry
cubicle wouldn't fix. Not that they would get that kind of treatment.
The clothing was stained with grass and dirt and he wasn't entirely sure
that it hadn't been damaged as well. The dry cleaners would have a job
with sorting out this mess but that was for later on. Hanging it up
would be the best he could do for now. He'd take the suit to the
cleaners when he had time, but he could throw the rest of what he had
been wearing into the wash so he did that and turned his attention to
getting dressed to go back out.
The lack of rain that had waked him up earlier hadn't lasted that long
after all. Sometime after he had gone into the shower it had resumed and
now was falling in a steady drizzle. He thought that the hot shower and
some ibuprofen gulped along with the coffee he made would have made more
of a difference, but it really didn't do as much as he'd hoped it would.
Dragging himself out of his house and into the car to head back to the
station, now that was almost too much for him to do but he bit down on
his lip and managed to power his way through it. He did feel better in a
marginal way, but he was in no way one hundred percent. More like sixty
percent would be more accurate if anyone asked him. He wasn't feeling
tip top right now but it wasn't any way even close to how out of it he
felt after dropping Mitch off with Andrea though.
He was just gathering up his things to step out the door when his phone
started vibrating in his pocket just a half a hair before the ringtone
sounded. He looked down at the display screen and wasn't surprised to
see that it was Andrea calling him. He really wasn't that surprised when
she did that, he could tell she was in mama bear mode last night and he
didn't think that the passage of a few hours had changed that very much.
It didn't really matter anyway, he was going to call Mitch when he got
into the car and she had just beaten him to it was all.
Mitch's car was still in the station's underground parking floor and he
doubted that Andrea was willing to let Mitch drive home on his own right
now. Whether or not he actually could do so was immaterial to her. Jim
expected that to be the case after dropping Mitch off. He answered the
phone and told her that he would be there in a few minutes and that he
was just stepping out the door. Andrea thanked him reflexively and asked
him to talk some sense into Mitch when he got there. he said he would
and as he hung up he already thought he knew some of what was going on
this morning in the Traver's home.
As he expected, Mitch had talked Andrea out of going to the hospital
right away last night, but it was clear that by the time morning's waxy
light was edging through the windows he wasn't going to be able to keep
her from dragging him in now that he had some rest under his belt. She
might have had to bend against that particular wind last night but last
night was past and now the bit was in her teeth and she intended to have
her way in this matter.
Jim wasn't the least little bit surprised at that. Andrea was like a dog
with a bone in its teeth when it came to Mitch and his physical welfare.
She wasn't the kind of woman who tried to take his mother's place as far
as calling the shots in his life, but at the same time she didn't let
him get away with abusing himself in the name of being stoic. Mitch in
turn didn't let her go too far either. She did tend to run away with her
worst fears sometimes and he would need to back her down when it looked
like it was one of those times when she was going too far. This morning
wasn't going to be one of those times though. Like Mitch said when Jim
brought him home last night. She needed this and Jim trusted his
partner's instincts too much to try to second guess him over how to deal
with his wife.
Even with several hours of sleep, a good hot shower and a couple of cups
of strong coffee in him what Jim knew he needed was more rest. He felt
better now, but that was just a matter of degree. After the mad dash the
three of them made out of the Grove's boundaries. After barely making
their way out of the reach of the mad dryad lurking there. After
followed that up with the long day spent cordoning off the area and
dealing with everything else as well; Jim could honestly say that he was
well and truly wrung out and he knew being on the near side of forty he
still hadn't recovered from that yet.
He might have been able to do so when he was in his twenties; back then
he was a rubber ball by comparison to how he was now. He wasn't in his
twenties anymore though and right at this moment he was thinking that he
had a glimpse of what his sixties might feel like when they got here and
if this feeling was in anyway true then he really wasn't looking forward
to it.
He picked up both of them before going into the station. Jim still felt
like hell and Mitch looked even worse. Andrea fussed over Mitch while
they drove in to the station. Jim could tell how bad Mitch really felt
from the lack of objection that he made while she did so. He pulled the
sedan into the underground bay and the three of them walked to the
elevator that would take them up to the main floor. Usually Jim would
take the stairs when he came in in the morning, but this morning he
needed rest more than he needed the brief spasm of exercise climbing
those stairs would give him.
Lieutenant Clayton was in her office when they came in. She was on the
phone with someone discussing what was happening with the blockade
around Magnolia Circle. Jim could tell that was what it was from the
side of the conversation that they could hear. Whoever it was on the
other side of the phone was definitely not very happy about it and from
the deference that she was speaking to him with it was a someone with a
good deal of political clout.
She hung up the phone when the conversation had concluded and fixed the
two of them with a frazzled glare.
"Remind me to thank the two of you for this mess sometime soon," she
said.
Clayton wasn't serious, but Jim knew her well enough that he recognized
her when she was drawing them into one of her infrequent griping
sessions.
"That was Alderman McKinsey," she said. "He's been on the phone with me
a dozen times already over what is going on over in Olympia."
Jim didn't say anything. Dealing with politicians that had their tail in
a knot over something was above his pay grade and he didn't envy Clayton
for having to deal with it one bit.
"He's been screaming about wanting to know what is going on ever since
his constituents were forced to evacuate and I don't have anything to
tell him other than it's just not safe for them right now."
She looked the two of them over, her eyes fixed on Mitch's neck.
"You," she said looking at him, "out of here, now. And don't tell me you
can deal with it. Your head looks like it's about to pop off of your
neck as it is. You're on medical leave effective immediately. I don't
want to see you back here until a doctor clears you to return to duty."
"That'll make Andrea happy at least," Mitch said trying for a reluctant
grumble and just managing to sound wearier than anything else. "Thanks,
Lieutenant," he added as he got up from the chair.
"That may be," she said "But that's not why I'm doing it. Christ I
should have gone with my gut and told the two of you to not come it at
all today, but this whole situation has us all off base."
She looked at Mitch. "Go have your wife take you to the hospital,
Mitch," she said. "We'll hold down the fort here until you get back. I'm
sure Jim will keep you posted."
Mitch started toward the office door and gratefully thanked the
lieutenant again on the way out. He went out of the office and the two
of them could hear the murmur of the fuss that Andrea was making over
him as she hustled him out slowly fade away with their footsteps.
"I should have told you to not come in either," she said to Jim. "You
look almost as bad."
"I'll manage," Jim said to her.
"That may be," she said leaning back in her chair, "but I'm inclined to
think otherwise Jim."
"I don't feel that bad lieutenant," Jim said, "I can deal with it."
"Maybe," the younger woman said to him. "But I'll tell you what I really
think. I think you feel worse than you look, but I need you here for now
so I'll pretend that you're not just muddling through for the time
being. Truth is, if I didn't need you here you'd be heading out the door
right behind Mitch. I need you sharp, but not as much as I need you here
so you're on light duty for now, you hear me?" she asked.
Jim nodded. Regardless of what he said Mitch accepted the mandatory rest
Clayton had ordered him to take and it didn't bother him one bit to go
home when he was like this. He was one of those guys who would push
through whatever was dogging him until he didn't have to, but if you
gave him the option and he really was wracked up he would take it
without much demurral.
Jim was much the same way as his partner and he wouldn't have shied away
from another twenty-four hours of down time if she had insisted on it,
but he also would have tried to power through it as best he could as
well.
"I mean light duty, Jim," she said to him emphasizing the words again.
"That means you do what you can here for now and you cut out early. I
need the two of you on top of things and that doesn't mean that I want
to look out my door and see a zombie going through the motions out
there."
At first, he had tried to say that he didn't need that much more time
and that he could handle it, but all it took was one of Clayton's
basilisk gazes to convince him that he was all but ramming his head
against a wall in this case and he backed down.
The truth was that it was more of a pro forma protest on his part, he
still felt almost as bad as Mitch did, he just didn't look as bad off
and he didn't have an Andrea to twist his arm and keep him from letting
his own stubbornness write a check that his body couldn't pay as easily
anymore.
Jim asked her what had happened while he was out of it and she filled
him in on what had filtered down to her level from the F.R.T. There
wasn't much for her to tell. Singh had remained on site until the F.R.T.
had taken over and he had been at Mercy General with Pantra since then.
Other than the rain slowly easing off, there had been little that was
apparently happening in the Grove that they could see.
Jim nodded when she told him that. Singh had said that if the Hamadryad
was able to calm her feral sister that things would settle down a bit
soon after she went into the Grove itself. It looked like he was right.
Jim couldn't say that he wasn't relieved that that seemed to be
happening.
He excused himself and went out of the office and made his way to where
his and Mitch's desks huddled in the back of the room. As he did so he
could hear a brief hush roll with him as he passed the desks of the
other detectives. He and Mitch had had a close call just a few hours
ago. Things like that didn't happen as often as movies and media made
them out, but when they did it was a reminder to them all that this was
not a nine to five job and there were consequences that went with
carrying a shield, even in missing persons.
The buzz of conversation resumed almost as quickly as it ceased. That
was to be expected as well. No one was anxious to confront one of the
consequences of what might happen to them or think on those consequences
longer than necessary if they could help it. That was just human nature
and he didn't fault any of the other detectives for doing so. Jim
reached his desk and eased down into his seat and took a few moments
trying to get as comfortable as he could get before reaching for
anything. He thought about getting up and getting a cup of coffee, but
he didn't want to move now that he had gotten settled.
There wasn't anything in his in-box and there was not much else here for
him to focus on. The Barnes case was at an impasse for the time being,
unless he could winkle something out of what he already had. The
Phillip's case was buried under what had happened in the Grove for the
time being and there was nothing else for him to dig into since Clayton
had made the two of them hand off the rest of their caseload.
He shuffled through the witness statements and tried to see if anything
jumped out at him first. There was nothing there, or at least nothing
that he hadn't already noted. He still plowed through it again, slowly
sifting through the data. That was what he did when he was stuck with a
case that wouldn't cooperate. Look for connections that might not seem
to be and run them down to their conclusions, but not this time. There
just wasn't enough of the puzzle for him to latch onto the right loose
end and tug on it until it made sense.
Jim sensed movement near his desk and looked up. It was Detective Brad
Sommers. He was the one that had taken most of their outstanding
caseload the day before. He plunked a Styrofoam cup of coffee on the end
of the desk.
"You look like you need it Jim," was all he said when Brighton glanced
up in his direction.
Jim murmured thanks and pushed the paperwork away for the moment.
"You sure you should be in here?" he asked. "Cause you don't look like
you could stand up to a stiff breeze right now."
"I'll manage," Jim said. "Clayton wants me on light duty for now. I can
handle that."
Sommers cocked his head as if to say that was a matter of opinion but he
didn't say anything else. Jim told him he would be fine and after a few
minutes Brad let the matter lie and mooched off to deal with his own
business. He wasn't the only one though. Others made excuses to drift by
his desk and check on him while he worked through what was available and
while Jim appreciated the sentiment it did disrupt what little there was
for him to do. But then since there were barely any straws for him to
grasp at right now even those interruptions didn't sidetrack him much.
Eventually he made it through all of what was there and he started in on
the transcription of the Barnes's journal. He had gone as far as he
could with everything else and Clayton did say that she was very
interested in what it could mean as far as piecing together just what
had happened to the vanished programmer. But how it factored into the
emergence of this Grove was something that Jim couldn't figure out. The
two were connected, he knew that but the question was how they were
connected and that was something he wanted to know as soon as possible.
He leaned back in his chair and started to plow through the
transcription.
Mitch's car was gone when he made his way down to the underground
parking garage beneath the station. Andrea had no doubt shoved him into
the passenger seat and was already well on the way to Mercy General
before he had even left the lieutenant's office. Jim was fairly sure
that it still mostly looked worse that it was but he was glad for
Mitch's sake that his wife was so aggressive on his behalf when her mama
bear claws came out. He on the other hand didn't leave until a little
after three. Even staying that small amount of time was more wearing on
him than he expected it to be. He got into his own car and slowly drove
home and collapsed back into dreamless slumber not long after he had lay
down.
There were several messages from Singh waiting for him on his phone when
his eyes fluttered open several hours later. He rubbed his eyes to
banish the remaining sleep from them and made his way into his kitchen
to get something to eat. He had needed that rest and needed it badly and
now that he had gotten it he was starting to feel like he was something
closer to normal rather than like he was still walking around in a fog
of exhaustion punctuated by the protests his abused muscles made.
He was also ravenous as well. The caloric bill for his exertions the day
before was coming due with a vengeance and he tamped down the screaming
black hole in his gut with some of the canned goods that he kept in the
kitchen cabinet. He was halfway through a tin of cold pork and beans
before it registered that all he had done was open it and start laying
into it right out of the can. He finished it up and heated the rest of
what he pulled out. Some Mac and cheese mix and a can of condensed soup
rounded out the rest of his meal. He had slapped together a couple of
ham and cheese sandwiches that got a quick run through the microwave to
heat them up. He ate them while he puttered around on the stovetop with
the rest of dinner. A can of peaches got the same treatment that he had
given the pork and beans and after he drained the last of the sweet
juice that lingered in the can he dropped the spoon in the tin to rattle
around for a few seconds.
He considered doing the dishes right away but there really weren't any
that demanded his immediate attention. He ran the two pots that he had
used to both cook and eat from full of water to soak until he was ready
to take care of them and then dropped the spoon that he used to eat with
to settle under the surface of the water soaking into the bigger pot as
well. The cans he swept into the trash can along with the empty Mac and
cheese box. That and a quick wipe of the counter afterward took care of
most of his clean-up for now.
He scrolled through the messages that Singh had sent him and other than
the updates that Singh had passed along regarding Pantra's condition
there was little there that was surprising. The FRT had taken charge of
the cordon around Magnolia Circle and from what Singh had told him both
he and Mitch were still high in the decision-making loop for the time
being. Jim wasn't sure how that was going to work but it was good of
Singh to give him a heads up about it.
There had not been any word from M'Tehr so far about what was happening
inside the Grove but it was clear that whatever she was doing in there
was having some kind of effect. The constant rain had begun to let up
and now that his attention was drawn to it Jim became aware of just how
faint the rain really was against his windows now. Jim settled in and
pulled the printout of the Barnes journal out of the briefcase and
settled in to look it over again.
The transcription was a lot cleaner this way and best of all he hadn't
been the one having to figure out if something was just bad handwriting
or intended to be written that way for some other reason. His eyes
flickered over the pages as he worked his way through the meat of it a
second time. The majority of it had been just as he expected it to be
when he first went through it at the station and there was little there
in that first glance that suggested that it was connected to the case
itself. He had stopped about half way through it when he decided to call
it a day and had left the rest of it to finish at home.
Most of what he slogged his way through seemed more like some guy's idea
of fantasy than anything else. It was interesting in its own way if your
tastes ran to psychedelic fantasies but for the most part Jim didn't see
that much that had any real bearing on Barnes disappearing or what Singh
had uncovered when they were there. He slowly worked his way through the
pages making notes on his own pad when something looked like it might
have some bearing on the case crossed his gaze. There wasn't that much
on his pad until he hit the last section of the transcript though.
Most of the journal seemed to him to be a time sink. Parsing his way
through some guy's drug trip scribbling ranks right now as something he
had to do to make sure all of the bases in the case were covered. The
last section wasn't like that. That part stopped him cold and he had to
flip back to the earlier part of the document to make sure that this was
supposed to be part of what he was reading. It seemed to his eyes like
it was something else tacked on and that it really didn't belong but
there it was and if this was not something that screamed that it was
relevant then he didn't deserve his shield. He reached for a notepad and
started jotting notes down for later as he combed through the last part
of the journal again and then again after that.
Once he had confirmed that he had what he thought relevant strained out
of the rest of the words written he pulled up the digital copy of the
journal and made copies of the sections that had gotten his attention.
He closed out the file before pulling up the rest of the case file to
see how what was there matched against what they already had. Some
things did, but there were still others that didn't still quite fit in
to the picture and he didn't like it when there were missing pieces to
his puzzle. It made him cranky when that happened and then he started
worrying at those details until they made some kind of sense.
Missing pieces usually meant you had missed something or you had not
gotten something else right and whatever that was then it was well on
the way to screwing up what you thought was progress. Sometime just
before midnight Jim woke up with his face mashed into a keyboard and a
long string of nonsense scrolling across the screen. He chided himself
for pushing too hard and did the best he could to repair the digital
damage his face had inflicted and then crawled into bed before he did
something more serious than just drool on the keyboard.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
The phone was insistently ringing. Jim groaned and rolled over to reach
for the phone where he had dropped it beside the bed. The low steady
thrumming of the air conditioner could be heard clearly now that the
storm was no longer drowning it out. Jim wished that he could have used
the sound of the air conditioner in the same way that he used his phone,
but the sound of the air conditioner was just annoying and made the
problem of dropping off to sleep worse for him.
He fished the phone off of the floor and started to tab the phone app
but it wasn't a call though. He wondered what had possessed him to set
the alarm app this time. He hated that damned thing even if he had it
set to ring in a manner similar to his old alarm clock. He punched the
cancel in a short savage jab and slipped it onto the bedside table. At
least it wasn't a call. That was a good thing as far Jim was concerned.
The last thing he needed right now as to try to talk while his brain was
still AWOL. That would have been a disaster as far as he was concerned.
He rolled over and dozed for a while, but not for long. The next time
bells went off to jolt him out of sleep it was his alarm clock going off
and he let out a weary groan as he heaved himself up from the bed to
kill that sound before he was too annoyed at having to get up to have a
hope of having a decent morning. He really must be getting his strength
back he thought.
After all he hadn't slept through his regular wake up the morning before
and now here he was, this morning at least, able to be roused from sleep
with only the normal resentment at being jolted awake. It was progress
he supposed. This morning he was just tired and not unconscious because
of bone deep weariness.
Jim reflexively looked at the time before fumbling in back of the clock
for the switch to kill the alarm. It was just after six A.M. That was
his regular wake up. From the look of it, he had slept longer than he
expected even if he hadn't dragged himself to bed until just after
midnight. Despite what the lieutenant said about making certain that he
was ready to go again before he came back, he intended to be back at the
precinct before nine if he could. She would want answers and Jim thought
he might have a few and if they weren't answers then maybe they would
push them in the direction of some answers and that would be just peachy
with him.
Right now, though he needed to get ready. Jim lurched out of the bed and
made his way to the shower. He would need a good hot one again. The last
couple of showers he had taken were like that and they had done a little
good for the sore muscles he still felt. Another one wouldn't hurt and
at the very least it would finish the job of waking him up.
The jangling of his phone drew his attention back to it while he was
partially dressed. For a moment he thought that he had set a second
alarm and forgotten it, but this time it really was the phone making the
noise and not his alarm. Since he had been in the bathroom getting ready
he had left the lights in the bedroom off. The sun was already creeping
up and the light was streaming in through the barely parted curtains. It
was bisecting the gloom of his bedroom and fell over his bed even if it
hadn't quite reached where his face would be when it made it there.
His hand fumbled with his Smartphone in the dim light and in his haste
he missed the accept call button and cancelled it by mistake. Jim walked
back into the brightly lit bathroom and started to flip through the
menu. Just as he was pulling up the call log to see who it was and call
them back the phone rang again. It was Mitch or at least it was someone
using his phone to call Jim anyway.
Jim's finger stabbed the accept button and he raised the phone to his
ear.
"Jim? It's Mitch," he heard his partner's voice say.
"Yeah Mitch, I'm here. I hit the wrong button again. What's up?"
"We need to go in now, something's come up," he said.
"What happened? When I left everything was settled down for the moment,"
Jim said. His mind was already clearing even with the effects of an
interrupted night's sleep still dogging him.
"It is. It still is. This is something else," Mitch said.
"What now?"
"A little over ten hours ago they apparently extracted Hank Phillips
from the...zone," Mitch hesitated a little when he had to refer to the
Grove by the cover name that the Lieutenant had instructed them to use.
"That sounds like a good thing to me Mitch," he responded. "What's the
issue?"
"He flat lined about a half an hour ago. Singh wouldn't say over the
phone what happened after they got him to Mercy General, but he said to
call you right away and that both of us needed to get in there. he said
he would be too busy to do that and for me to take care of it."
"Did he give you any hint about what is going on?" Jim asked.
"I just got the call myself," Mitch rasped back at him. "We want to know
what's going on then we need to get in there now. We can be certain that
the Lieutenant is going to be all over us and right now we don't have
any answers."
Crap, Jim thought to himself. This case was already well on its way to
being a nightmare of epic proportions just with the existence of the
Grove and the secrecy involved with that complicating their missing
person's investigation. Throwing a possible homicide into their laps
just felt like overkill to him right now. Especially since it was
entirely too likely that nothing would come of a homicide charge since
the prime suspect was who and what she was. Damn he hated it when
something he was doing ended up trailing off into the den of some
political trap. That never ended well and even if there was a first time
for it to happen, he didn't think that it was too likely to be this
time.
"Are you sure you're up to doing this Mitch?" he asked. "Clayton was
pretty clear about you staying off the clock until you get the doctor's
thumbs up."
"I'm fine Jim," Mitch rasped. "Doc told me that I can go back to duty
now."
Jim had his doubts if that was all that the doctor had to say, but if
Mitch was pushing himself too far he'd find a way to intervene.
"I'll be over to pick you up as soon as I square myself away here Mitch.
You really don't need to be driving and I think Andrea will kill both of
us if I let you try. We'll hit the morgue first and then go to whatever
floor they had him on in Mercy General. That's where Singh probably is
anyway if he's not already in the morgue and as long as he's there we
don't have to chase him down."
"See you in about twenty then," Mitch said. Jim ended the call and put
the phone down on the counter. He was almost ready anyway; there wasn't
any need to rush even if he had to leave a little sooner than he had
planned to. He finished up and reached for his suit coat. On the way to
the door his hands moved in the regular pattern that he had established
for whenever he left the house. Briskly his hands passed over wallet,
keys, phone, badge and pistol. All there. He stepped out the door and
quickly locked it behind him. Raja was still there, but he had moved
from the planter to find a more comfortable spot on the outside table.
The big black cat raised his eyes a bit and made an interrogative mrrow
to him as he headed toward the car. Jim let his hand brush over the
cat's head for a moment and got it nuzzled in response. By the time the
engine was cranked and car slowly backing out of the carport, Raja had
gone back to sleep. Jim pointed the nose of the car in the direction of
Mitch's house the sun would be fully up by the time he got there and Jim
already suspected that whatever peace he had this morning would be gone
already before too long.
Mitch looked impossibly rested when Jim eased his car into the driveway
and leaned over to call dispatch and inform them that they were now on
the way to the City Morgue in the basement of Mercy General. Mitch was
somehow managing to look almost indecently cheerful as well as rested.
He slipped into the passenger seat with a barely audible grunt and
closed the door behind him. He turned back toward the front door where
Andrea was hovering watching him as he left. Mitch gave her a little
wave and held eye contact with her as Jim pulled the car out of the
driveway and backed into the street. As soon as they were away from line
of sight to his house Mitch turned away and his face fell into his
normal half worried expression that Jim was more familiar with.
"Well that was fast," Jim said as he turned the car toward the main
road.
"What was fast?" Mitch replied.
"How your face went from I'm loving life to I just stepped in a giant
pile of dogshit," Jim said unconsciously signaling the turn onto Baxter
Street.
"I always smile when I leave in the morning and especially after
something really does happen," Mitch said. "It keeps Andrea from
worrying as much when I do. I don't let her see me any other way when I
leave."
"Does it help?" Jim asked. He must still be out of it a bit; he knew
that Mitch did some variation of just now and he had overlooked it.
Probably because he did expect for Mitch to do something like that at
all.
"Probably not," Mitch said, "But it doesn't hurt and after the last two
nights I don't want her stressing more than she is if I can help it."
Jim nodded in understanding. A lot of cops, the ones that weren't
oblivious to little touches like that, did something along those lines
when they went in. Jim had always told his wife that he loved her when
he left, even when their marriage was nothing more than a torn rag of a
thing. No matter what was going on between them, it was important to him
that if that was going to be the last thing that she remembered him
saying to her, then that would be what she heard from him.
"Does Singh know the details of what happened with Phillips yet?" Jim
asked.
"He didn't say. He just said for both of us to get in as quickly as we
could. He's been at the hospital off and on ever since he could get away
from Magnolia Circle. He's been waiting to hear if Pantra is going to
pull through or not."
"He should be at the morgue already, by the time we get there then," Jim
said. "We'll see what it is that he has for us then."
Jim glanced over at Mitch as he drove. The mottled discoloration around
his neck had finally bloomed into its full glory. A tapestry of purple
on purples in deepening shades that encircled his neck where the root
had left its mark deep in his flesh.
Riding in the car was usually one of the times that they would usually
bounce ideas and plow through case theories together. And after he had
read through the transcription of the Barnes journal last night Jim had
more than a few that he needed to bounce off of his partner while there
were no other ears around to hear. The problem was that Jim wasn't sure
about a couple of things this morning.
The most obvious one was that Mitch looked like he still needed to be in
to the hospital this morning and not coming there on case related
business; the other was the contents of the journal itself and what it
meant to him when he finally had gone over it after he had recovered
from facing what was in the Grove.
Mitch looked reasonably alert so after weighing the merits of holding
off a little longer he decided that if it proved too much for his
partner, he would just drop it and they would pick it up again later.
"Did you go over that journal yet?" he asked quietly as he slowed down
and stopped at a four-way crossing.
"Yeah, I did," Mitch answered. Most of it was just a waste of time as
far as things related to this case go."
"Except?" he asked.
"You know exactly what wasn't a waste," he said quietly. "You knew that
before you asked me."
Jim took a deep breath and forced his hands to loosen where they had
gripped the steering wheel tight as the men were speaking.
"The last twelve pages," he said just as quietly as Mitch had.
When Jim had opened the transcribed document most of what he read there
was more of a record of what Barnes was doing while he was experimenting
with black lotus. There were several detailed passages early in the book
that were focused on what he had experienced during his initial trip and
how he was dealing with his discoveries on subsequent trips.
If it were not for what Singh had told him, Jim would have chalked up a
lot of what the man had written down there as a colorful recollection of
a drug addled mind trying to make sense of what his state of altered
conscience had wrought within his mind. But what Singh had to say in
this matter carried more weight with Jim now than it had just a couple
of days before so it had made him go back and look over what Barnes had
written there and absorb what the man had written with a mind more open
than usual when it came to matters such as these.
Once he had done that, the account that he read there took on an
entirely different significance in his mind and things that he would
probably have overlooked or dismissed as the mental wanderings of a
disordered mind demanded Jim give them more careful and sober
consideration than he might otherwise have done.
Once that due consideration was established, Jim found that what Barnes
had written in the journal was actually extremely detailed. He wasn't
just some bored techie out for a semi-illicit experience. He was someone
who was genuinely curious about just what it was he had found in the
fumes of burning lotus. He approached what he discovered in a cautious,
methodical fashion. If anything, what the man had detailed in the pages
seemed more like a form of scientific exploration than some druggie's
trip record.
Except for the last twelve pages. After what, according to the timeline
of his notes, were several weeks of experimentation and exploration he
abruptly ceased to write anything. From the discrepancy between the last
dates and from where it resumed again there was at least a couple of
weeks where, according to Barnes, he had completely abandoned his
efforts to explore entirely with no reason given. And then without
further explanation he resumed what he was doing only this time there
was a more frantic vibe coming from the account written there.
The last twelve pages were so completely different in tone and tenor
from what Barnes had written before. Even then there wasn't much and
from what he could make out by reading what the man had written there,
those pages only covered the last few days just before his
disappearance, but it was nothing like what he had written before.
There was a tone of desperation that practically screamed from the pages
and along with the desperation there was a deep undercurrent of fear.
That at least matched up with what Singh had told them when he examined
the house. The other thing was that Barnes seemed to have completely
changed his writing style as well as he wound up his account. Where
before he had been detailed and analytical and overall had an attitude
of fascination with what he was doing. The last section was deliberately
vague in those areas that, as the one investigating his disappearance,
Jim found maddeningly unhelpful.
There was something there, something critical, but the man's dominating
fear wouldn't let him come out and say what it was. He kept talking
about changes the last two days before the narrative abruptly stopped,
but he didn't say anything about what those changes were. It was almost
as if he was afraid that by writing out what it was that was happening
it would make them even more real. Like the act of committing the words
to paper would seal him in some irrevocable way so he was deliberately
vague. And in addition to that he was strongly hinting about something
else that was there as well. He didn't come out and say it either, but
reading it as it was written Jim could only assume that he was being
hunted and whatever was hunting him had found him. That also seemed to
be something that Singh had already confirmed as well and Jim was glad
that they had something physical to point to. Others may not believe
them when they related how they got their information initially, but
with this they could point to these pages and let the person asking
assume that that was the source and not the corroboration.
"What do you think it means?" He asked Mitch after he told him what he
had gotten out of reading the journal.
"I think he got in so far over his head that he fell in and whatever it
was that scared the hell out of him jumped in after him and pulled the
cover close after them both. But what exactly that is I haven't got the
faintest clue."
"Me neither," Jim said as he navigated the streets almost automatically.
"I'll tell you what really bothers me," Mitch rasped. "And that's the
idea that maybe this was planted there for us to find. I don't know why
that might be, but maybe it's because of the fact that he wrote it down
that way at all. Barnes was a tech guy. He writes software for a living.
From what was in the house he was wired in almost every conceivable way
that a guy with that background could be and when he goes to document
what he's doing what does he do? He reaches for a notebook and a pen.
I'm thinking that it doesn't seem quite in character for this guy."
Jim thought about what Mitch said. He chewed it over in his mind for a
few minutes and thought about what he had seen of how Barnes had lived
before he vanished and what others had said about him and as reasonable
as his partner's doubt was, he didn't think that Mitch was making the
same connections that he was.
"Mitch," he began. "I think something like this just might be in his
character. Sure, he's a techie. Sure, he's got every gadget and doodad
that you'd expect a guy with that background to have. But this is also a
guy with a sentimental streak a mile wide as well. In between every
high-tech thing he has in his house he also shoehorned that collection
of stuff that he picked up over who knows how many trips to flea
markets, yard sales and antique shops. This guy likes his technology to
be the latest thing but he's also got a strong connection to the past as
well and I can see where keeping this account this way might appeal to
the sentimental aspect of his personality."
Mitch didn't say anything, but Jim could tell he was listening to what
he had to say and considering it. "And there is something else that does
factor into his techie background to consider," he added.
"What's that?" Mitch asked.
"No matter how good a hacker is, there is no possible way that anyone
would be able to hack a handwritten journal without physically going
into the house. As far as being secure from cyberspace intrusion that is
about as safe as you can get."
"I wonder what it saw," Mitch asked absently.
"What do you wonder what it saw and what is the it we're talking about?"
"His house," Mitch said.
"What do you mean?" Jim said. "There wasn't any cameras pointed inside
and if there were any there, we sure haven't found them."
The lack of cameras was something that had disappointed both of them.
Barnes did have cameras wired to his central system, but they had all
been focused outside and on the days in question when he disappeared the
imagery that had been recovered from his hard drives had distinctly
unhelpful almost as if it had already been wiped clean. Whether Barnes
himself had done it or someone else was responsible the absence of those
digital timestamps what had made it clear was that this was not just
some guy that had taken a powder, but it also had been of no use to them
in determining just what it was that had happened. As far as being
helpful the outside cameras were a complete disappointment from an
investigative standpoint.
At least there were cameras outside though. When Jim had seen that there
was a digital recording system, he had initially had some hope that they
could catch a break but that didn't last long. There was a distinct lack
of footage inside the house entirely. Jim supposed that was not that
surprising in its own way. When they had them most folks routinely
pointed their security cameras outward, not inward. Jim figured that
unless they had some reason to keep themselves under a camera inside
that they wouldn't even bother and most of the time he was right. It
would have made his job a lot easier if they didn't but he thought that
was mainly because most people disliked the idea of being under
surveillance even if it was being done by their own hands.
"I don't mean the security system," Mitch said. "We took all of that
data when we took every hard drive he had in the place. I'm talking
about what the house saw. That smart TV was a broadcasting camera every
time someone walked in that room. And that display screen on the inside
of the front door might as well say smile for the camera. You know that
every time someone walked in front of it it's more than likely it was
taking snapshots. That's just off the top of my head. I'm sure there are
other things in there we might be able to access as well. Sure, we might
not get film of anything that happened there, but there might be stills
that we could use to piece together those last couple of days."
Jim slowed the car to a stop and pulled over. "You are a magnificent
bastard," he told his partner. "It didn't even occur to me to consider
that. Barnes is a techie and his house is full of things with cameras
and with all of those are nothing more than a collection of eyes looking
everywhere. And one of those eyes is likely to have snapped something
up."
Jim reached in his pocket for his phone and called the station. While he
was waiting to be connected, he asked Mitch if he had any idea of how
long he thought those devices might hold that information before the
system purged anything that would be useful to them. Mitch had a smart
TV himself and when he thought about it, he estimated that at most any
images would only be held a couple of weeks. When he was connected Jim
quickly ordered that a pair of techs to be escorted to the Barnes house
and for them to pull everything, they could find off of any smart
devices that might have data in those systems for them to review.
Jim hung up and eased the car back into traffic from where he had parked
while he made the call. He told Mitch that they told him that it would
be done before they got back from the hospital.
Mitch nodded and turned away to stare out the passenger window for the
rest of the trip. As he drove Jim had the thought cross his mind that
the techs were a little too quick to comply with his request. They
hadn't even tried to tell him about anything else that was baying for
their time and resources right now. He mentioned that to Mitch and heard
him murmur 'it's good to be the king' to him in response.
He was going to ask him what he meant by that when he made the
connection himself. They were right now the number two people in
anything to do with the Grove over in Olympia and if that position
didn't light a fire under people's tail feathers then he didn't know
what would. Jim chuckled at the absurdity of two regular detectives with
the ability to make the whole city hop. He was going to ask Mitch what
he thought but when he cut his eyes at his partner, he was just leaning
quietly against the window with his eyes barely closed. Jim gave up the
idea and let Mitch get some rest while he drove them both the rest of
the way there.
When Mercy General had been built about twenty years before, one of the
things that the architects had done was to build the new city morgue in
its foundations. Just as the hospital that Mercy General was replacing
could no longer cope, the old city morgue was already too small to meet
the needs of the growing city as well. The city planners had decided to
kill two birds with one stone since both projects were given the go
ahead by the city planning office at the same time. Jim supposed that
there was some cost savings option in there that made it more attractive
to them.
That didn't mean that they closed the old facility though, the old
morgue was still around; since they hadn't demolished it they had just
designated it as a satellite of the new one and it continued to soldier
on from its location on the other side of town. The hospital that Mercy
General replaced hadn't been so fortunate. It had been torn down and the
land it stood on had been rebuilt as a public park.
The smell of the morgue always struck Jim as something that was a bit
out of place. It was overwhelmingly antiseptic with just the faint odor
of decomposing flesh held in abeyance by a judicious use of modern
technology. The all over smell of bleach and disinfectant that they used
to stay ahead of the odor that did make it through the effort to banish
it seemed like it was bleeding from the industrial grey paint that was
slathered on the walls. The florescent lights that were the most common
type used in government buildings came in two flavors. They either gave
a steady bright light that the dark paint drank up or they flickered;
like they were warning you in advance that soon they would crap out on
you and leave you fumbling in the dark.
Jim knew the morgue was supposed to smell this way. He'd been in far too
many of them over the years, even though he had never worked homicide.
Its background odor was just one of those things to him; but sometimes
he had the stray thought that a place where the dead were kept should
smell more than just a little dead as this place did. As a warning to
others that this wasn't were you wanted to go to unless you had a
reason. Not that he wanted to walk into a charnel house; he just always
expected what his nose told was not fully there to be there.
The sign in desk was empty. Mitch leaned over and hit the buzzer to let
whoever was in the back know that someone was here in the front now.
There was a long few minutes wait and then Jim leaned down and gave the
buzzer a good long hard press. In the back of the room a pair of double
doors opened inward and a short man in green scrubs with frizzy red hair
tied back along the nape of his neck ducked his head in to look them
over.
"Detectives Brighton and Travers," Jim said laying his badge and
department ID against the glass where the guy could see it clearly.
"We're here about..."
"I think I know why you're here," the short man said in a disturbingly
relieved tone of voice. "Come around. I'll buzz you right in," he said
and disappeared around the corner out of sight.
Jim heard the harsh buzzing of an electronic door lock and pulled open
the heavy door to walk through.
"I'm not sure what to make of this Jim," Mitch said. "That guy seems a
little worked up over a DOA from exposure.
"Is that what we're calling it?" Jim said quietly.
"Might as well," Mitch said. "It holds more water for those who don't
know better than what did happen."
"This guy might not agree," Jim said reaching for the inner door.
"That's Singh's and the Lieutenant's problem, not ours," Mitch said as
he followed Jim into the morgue proper.
Through the double doors on the other side of the electronic door wafted
the odor of more disinfectant and the underlying flavor that came from a
blend of bodies in various states of decomposition. Even with measures
taken to slow the natural process of decay at best all that could be
done was arrest the process somewhat and failing that to lock it away
where it would be as inoffensive as possible.
The short man with the frizzy red hair was waiting for them on the other
side of the door. He was practically hopping from one foot to the other
as the two detectives walked up to him.
"I was wondering if you guys would ever show up for one of these," the
man said speaking rapidly. "You almost missed it. I'm supposed to ship
this one on a community ticket to Bryar's in a couple of hours."
"I'm not sure what you think we're here for," Mitch said. "We need to
speak with the M.E. about a patient who just coded upstairs a couple
hours ago. Name of Hank Phillips? He should be down here now."
The short man stopped mid-way in holding the door open for them.
"You mean you're not here following up my investigation request then?"
He asked. His face fell and the excitement that had animated him ceased
immediately.
"Not unless it involves Hank Phillips we aren't," Jim said. Where's the
M.E.?
"Damn it," the short man said in an exasperated tone. "I thought someone
finally took me seriously for once."
"Is the M.E. finished with him yet? Mitch asked again.
"M.E. isn't here right now," The short man said. "He has a court hearing
he is giving testimony in this morning. He should be back just before
noon."
"Has one of the deputy M.E.'s or one of the other staff looked at
Phillips yet? Jim asked.
"Let me pull his name up on the master roster and I'll find out," the
man said moving over to one of the workstations, his voice dull with
disappointment. "But I really don't think so, there have been a lot of
calls this morning and I think I'm the only one not out doing pickups
right now.
He asked them to spell Phillip's name and after his fingers tapped a few
more entries onto the keyboard he shook his head and looked over at the
two of them.
"I'm not showing him in our system," he said.
"He should be here," Mitch said. "We got the word about him over an hour
ago. He would have come from the hospital upstairs."
"That doesn't matter. It makes no difference where he came from. The
system here is integrated and whether it's an internal transfer from the
hospital above or an intake from the city; when it comes to us having a
body, they're all logged here from the moment they get picked up until
we release them to wherever," the man said. "If we had him, he would be
in the system."
"Then who has him?" Mitch asked.
"Beats me," the man said. "I suppose he might have been sent directly to
a private mortuary. That's always a possibility if they know to do that
and there's no call for an autopsy. They'd know what happened with him
for certain upstairs, but I can tell you that we don't have him in here.
Or at least we don't have him officially. I can't vouch for him just
being stored in the back without being in the system though."
"We should call Singh," Jim said quietly. "Perhaps because of the
circumstances he was sent somewhere else."
"We should have considered that aspect. But I think he would have said
something if that was the case," Mitch agreed. "We should track Singh
down and see what's going on with this then."
"Hey, I know you guys are here for something else, but before you go can
I get you to please have a look at this. It'll just take a couple of
minutes and I've got to ship this body in a couple of hours. No one is
taking me seriously on this and I think that there's something seriously
wrong here."
Mitch looked over to the man. "What are you talking about...?"
"Matt," the short man said easing back from his office seat an extending
one hand toward them. "Matt Gregor."
The two men looked down at the extended hand still encased in a tight
blue surgical glove. Neither of them made a move to take his hand. Matt
blinked wondering why neither of the men were willing to take his hand
and then realized he hadn't taken off his examination gloves.
"I'm sorry," he said. "Give me a second here."
Matt stripped off the surgical gloves and threw them in a wastebasket.
He reached into the desk drawer and retrieved a small bottle of hand
sanitizer and quickly rubbed some over his hands.
"Occupational hazard, I wear these things so much here that I sometimes
forget I'm wearing them," he said as the two men took his hand in turn.
"One time I met this girl in a coffee shop on the way home from work.
She seemed into me and I was just about to ask her if she wanted to meet
up again for something later when she asked me what my job was."
Matt reached into his pocket and took another set of gloves out. "I
completely forgot that I was wearing these and when I told her I worked
in the M.E.'s office she got this look on her face. You could tell she
was really creeped out by the idea of it. That conversation hit a brick
wall in a fast hurry and she practically disappeared a few minutes
later."
"That must have been disappointing for you," Jim asked. "You run into
that a lot?"
"More than you could possibly guess," Matt said "Most either let you
know it creeps them out openly like that one did, or they don't say
anything about it, but it still creeps them out and they ghost you."
"Must make it hard for you to get to know someone long enough for you to
have them get past it. I'm guessing you don't have a girlfriend that
often," Mitch said.
"Nope, but I'm telling you I could have one that quick if I wanted to,"
Matt said snapping his fingers.
"How's that work then?" Mitch asked.
"Look, I get it that most people are creeped out by people like me;
people who work with the dead. I knew that would happen when I got this
job, but the freaky thing isn't the ones who get creeped out by my job.
The freaky thing is the ones who don't get creeped out. They have
literally the opposite reaction"
"So maybe that's your solution then," Mitch said.
Matt looked at Mitch in amazement. "Are you kidding? Those girls creep
me out and I hang out with dead people all day," he said firmly.
"So just what is it that you're so desperate to have someone looking at
anyway?" Jim asked. They did have a few minutes to spare, but only a
few. The body wasn't here and Singh was probably still speaking with the
attending physicians, locking down any details that might possibly
compromise the secrecy of what was taking place at Magnolia Circle. In
his opinion, Singh didn't need their help with that and having them
there looming over the medical team may not be the message Singh was
trying to send to them.
"Some class-A weird shit," Matt said. "M.E. won't even listen to me;
seriously he doesn't. He tells me I'm just seeing things and then he
says I'm too inexperienced to know what it is I see. But I'm really not,
I mean it's so obvious that even a guy like me can see it and I'm not
saying that because I think I'm super smart at this. I'm saying it that
way because if somebody like me can see it, anyone else has, like, no
excuse."
"That sounds like you're awfully close to making some kind of allegation
there against your colleagues Matt" Mitch said.
"I know that," Matt said. "And at this point I guess I am. I can't point
to anything specific, but I know that the M.E. is being creative with
the rules in these cases. That's my opinion. I'm not thinking he's
trying to hide anything; it's more like he doesn't want to look. Like if
he did, he'd have to do something he doesn't want to do, and at the same
time he couldn't avoid doing anything once he did see it."
Jim looked over to Mitch. While Matt was talking to Jim, Mitch had
gotten a text and had just looked down from checking it. "Anything from
Singh?" he asked.
"he said he's speaking with Phillip's doctor now. he said that we should
get up there as quick as we can and he'll bring us up to speed; whatever
that is supposed to mean."
"Sounds like he's got it in hand and there's no urgency for us to get up
there just yet," Jim said.
"Not really. But we should wrap this up pretty quick Jim," Mitch replied
putting his phone away.
"Please guys, I really need someone else to look at this. It is
seriously not right."
Jim exhaled. "Okay, okay, we'll take a look at what you've got," he
said. "But we can't promise that anything will come of it."
"If you see even half of what I see, you'll make something come of it,"
Matt said confidently.
They followed him through the grey painted doors. Doors like those were
cheap. Meant to be banged open by gurneys and pushed aside casually and
then swing back unattended. That's what they were. Cheap but sturdy.
They didn't need to be more than that. The first few doors on the left
and right of the hallway led into offices. Most of the doors were
closed, but a couple of them stood open. They passed those doors and
moved down to the end of the hallway. A second set of double doors
opened into another long hallway turning off to the left and ending in
another set of doors that needed a key card to get into. On the frosted
glass of the door windows was marked examination room two.
Matt swiped his key card and took them down into the refrigeration room
and then led them toward a floor to ceiling bank of storage bins for the
bodies that were currently kept in the morgue. He reached up for the
outside latch and opened one of the middle bins. Once he did that he
reached inside and then slid the body out for them to see it cradled on
the movable stainless-steel tray inside the bin.
The toe tag was a deep manila yellow. Jim had seen them before so it was
no surprise to see it first as the body slid out. The stiff paper barely
moved on the thin wire that lashed it to the flesh when Matt flipped the
white sheet covering the body away with a flourish like an aspiring
magician. Jim almost expected him to say ta-da while he did it but he
didn't.
"This is what I wanted you to look at," he said trying to be as
earnestly serious as he could to the two detectives.
The body that he revealed to them was that of an elderly female. At
first glance there were no marks that either of them could discern to
indicate cause of death on the naked body. The 'Y' incision that marked
where the autopsy had been performed had been fastened back together
with a few medical staples. Those were really the only marks to indicate
that violence of any kind had been done to this old woman's corpse.
"Is this some kind of joke?" Jim asked him.
"No, I promise you that it's not," Matt said.
"Maybe it's just me, but I'm failing to see how an old woman who looks
like she died in bed like this one does rates as class A weird shit,"
Jim said. "Who is she anyway?
"Jane Doe number 5452," Matt said.
"I'm still not seeing anything that suggests anything that demands an
investigation here," Mitch said. "I'm with Detective Brighton on this
Dr. Gregor. She looks to me like just an old woman who died of natural
causes."
Mitch was getting formal in his tone. Jim couldn't say that he didn't
expect that. Neither of them had much use for people who wasted their
time in stupid ways and this was starting to look like it was going to
be one of those times. Gregor was about half a tick away from hearing it
from both of them and if he didn't know it then he was not as bright as
he thought he was.
"Yeah, I know that's what she looks like, but it's not," Matt said
insistently. "She was brought in last week. They found her in an alley,
no sign of any assault and the M.E. said to just write it up as natural
causes and ship her out.
"Sounds like a reasonable assumption. Why didn't you do it? Was there
anyone fitting her description reported missing during that time or did
you get any hits from the federal data system on her fingerprints? Why
didn't you do just like your M.E. told you to do? Jim asked him.
"Did you think she was just lost then? Did you think that as old as she
looks, she might have just wandered away from her nursing home and made
it as far as the alley they found her in?" Mitch suggested.
"No to any of those questions," Matt said, "No woman matching her
description was reported missing and there was nothing on the FDS. She
is the same as all of the others that I flagged, it's like they all just
dropped out of the sky."
"What others?" Jim asked. "How many of these old women have you flagged
like you said?" Whether he knew it or not Gregor was getting close to a
set of gross abuse of a corpse charges if he didn't make himself clear
otherwise, he decided.
"More than this one here I can tell you," he answered. "Like I said
she's not the only one and it's like they all came out of nowhere."
"I'll grant you that's a bit strange, but it's not that far out. Street
folks come and go all the time and more than a few just drop dead like
this. I have to say I'm not seeing anything here Gregor. It looks like a
garden variety homeless woman who died of natural causes to me just like
your M.E. says it is.
Matt leaned over the woman's face. "Have a look here. I think this will
get your attention," He reached into the woman's mouth and peeled back
her lips and forced the jaw open slightly so the two of them could get a
better look inside.
"That's a good set of dentures," Mitch said after a moment of looking at
the woman's mouth. I wouldn't have expected a homeless woman to have
something like that, but that doesn't count as weird, just unusual."
"Look again," he said. "Those aren't dentures."
Mitch looked closer and then gestured Jim over to confirm that he was
seeing the same thing.
"That's right," Matt said. "Now you're seeing it. This woman has all of
her teeth. And check this out."
Matt pointed to the back of the woman's mouth. "Her wisdom teeth haven't
even erupted yet."
"That's impossible. That should have happened decades ago," Mitch said.
"I'm not a doctor and even I know that."
"Doesn't matter," Matt said. "That's what I see in my professional
judgment and more important I have the x-rays to back it up."
Matt pulled the jaw open a little further. He had to strain a bit to
force the stiffened flesh of the jaws open wide enough for the two
detectives to get a good look.
"Look at the back molars," he said. "Tell me what you see."
Jim leaned over and aimed the examination light that Matt had flipped on
directly down the woman's throat. Leaning this close the odor of her
decay was stronger and he had to hold his breath as he did so, so as not
to breathe in any more of her corruption than he had to.
Jim stood up and turned his head to the side to get a breath of cleaner
air. "That's pretty remarkable. She has better teeth than I do."
"It's not remarkable, it's impossible," Matt said. "I don't know what
this woman is, but those are not the teeth of an octogenarian. She's not
missing one tooth. Not one. She has the small beginning of a cavity on a
couple of teeth and that's it. These teeth are as clean as you could
expect from someone who hasn't brushed in a couple of weeks when she
came in here. There are no stains whatsoever except the faintest ones
from a cup of coffee or something like that.
Mitch was looking at the woman intently while Matt was talking. "He's
right Jim," he said. "I saw a lot of street folks when I was in vice and
none that were this age would have a mouth like this."
"There's more," Matt said. "Take a closer look at the molars."
"I just did," Jim said. "I didn't see anything that jumped out."
"And that's the problem. Most people don't see something like this until
it's pointed out," Matt said. "Run your tongue over your own molars
right now."
Jim looked at him quizzically. "Just do it," Matt said.
"What am I looking for?" Jim asked his voice distorted from speaking
with his tongue rubbing his molars.
"You feel how one side of your very back teeth are worn down and the
other is almost untouched?"
"Yeth," Jim said.
"That's from a normal chewing pattern. Over a lifetime most people favor
one side of their mouth while they are chewing and that side gets worn
down much more consistently than the other side of the same tooth."
"Ok," Jim said. "So, what's the connection? Why the dental lesson?"
"Her molars aren't worn at all. That's what the connection is," Matt
said aiming the light directly at the woman's back teeth.
"The plain truth is, if I were to show just these teeth and nothing of
the face to a dentist and ask their opinion on them; I'm pretty sure
they would confirm what I'm saying about this woman.
"And what's that?" Jim asked.
"That she is impossible. She is a walking contradiction. Those teeth
belong in the mouth of a woman somewhere between twenty-two and twenty-
six years old. And that's not all."
"What else do you have?" Mitch asked.
"A lot more. Her joint and bone structure match that of a younger woman
too. Same goes for the organs. I don't care what the outside of this
package says. Body systems don't lie. Not like this they don't. The
organs I pulled out during my autopsy do not match those from a woman
her apparent age. There is no trace of any form of geriatric disease of
any kind. No joint or skeletal degeneration, very few traces of bone
density loss, and none of the organs look even remotely like they came
from a woman in her eighties who has been living on the street for god
knows how long."
Matt pointed at the woman's corpse. "She is a lie. Everything I can test
for medically tells me that this woman should be in her mid-twenties.
Everything I see here forensically backs that up as well. Now you look
again knowing that and tell me that I'm wrong."
Matt gestured one last time for the two men to have a last look at the
woman and when both of them declined he re-draped the sheet back over
her and slid her body back into the refrigerated storage box.
Matt stripped his gloves off and threw them into a nearby wastebasket
and fished more sanitizer out of his pocket. "That's what I mean by
class A weird shit," he said while he rubbed it into his skin. "She's
just like every other one that I flagged before her. And every single
one of them the M.E. just signed off on and told me to forget it."
"If that's his position, how'd you ever get him to authorize an
autopsy?" Mitch asked.
"I logged it as personal training time after hours on the books. After
the first one got my attention I had to do that just to get a closer
look and make sure that I wasn't just seeing things and when I was sure
and I saw more of them go past me that's what I've been having to do
just to make any progress on these. I flag one whenever it comes in, I
send in a request for an investigator, and then I document what I can a
few hours before I have to ship the body. I add what I find to my
digital and my hard copy files and then I wait for what comes next.
Usually it's another body and still nothing happens. What I have is from
every one of these that I could verify for my unofficial investigation,
nobody else even touches it, that's why I was so glad to see you guys.
I've taken it as far as I can and unless someone like you can take over,
all I can do is keep documenting every case like this that I see when
they come in."
"How many of these cases have you seen? I mean cases that you can
verify," Jim asked him.
"Over two dozen easy," Matt said. "And that's just my count since I
actually noticed it and started looking for it in others when they came
in. I have no idea how many slipped past me before that."
"Jesus," Mitch said.
"You said she's going to Bryar's on a community ticket in a few hours.
What happens there?" Jim asked.
"She gets cremated like all the other indigents when we can't find
family to claim the body. Bryar's has a municipal contract to cremate
and store remains until a family member can claim them. Most never do."
"So, once she's sent there everything you just showed us goes up in
smoke then?" Jim asked.
"That's about it," Matt said. "But ever since I started seeing these
I've logged as much as I can. Every autopsy I could swing, every dental
record, fingerprints and whatever else I could think of. I got
everything down as much as I could. I have a rack of tissue samples
stashed away in the freezer and about a dozen reprimands from the M.E.
for exceeding my authority so far. I'm about this close to getting
canned, but I really don't care."
He gestured back toward the freezer. "Whatever this is it's something so
not right that I can't even begin to process the why or the how. All I
know is the what."
"Give me what you have," Mitch said. "I'll do some digging off the books
as well and I think you should have a talk with a Detective Singh. We'll
tell him to get in touch with you when we see him."
The look of relief that washed over Matt's face was visible to both of
them. For a half moment he closed his eyes as he exhaled and they could
see some the restrained tension that he must have felt constantly
draining from him. His shoulders sagged a bit in relief as well. Jim had
seen more than a few people react like that when stress over something
that dominated their life fell away and Matt just got himself added to
the running count that Jim maintained in his head of people like that.
They followed Matt back to his cubicle. He gave them a copy of all of
the data he had. Apparently, from the immediate access that he had to
spare already loaded flash drives, he had already made several copies.
Mitch wondered if he had already salted a few other copies away to be
released in the event something happened to him, but he didn't ask him
about that. He probably had done so, considering what he was sitting on
it would have been the prudent choice.
Mitch didn't ask him because no matter how he could think to frame the
question there wasn't any way that he could say it that wouldn't imply
that Matt was just seeing a conspiracy and taking it around the bend. He
knew that because Mitch smelled as big of a rat in this as Matt did and
all he could say to him for now was that Detective Singh would be in
touch with him and that if they had anything come up from their end,
they would keep him in the loop.
Matt looked even more relieved when they said that. Jim was pretty
certain that it was him putting down that mental load that he had been
carrying around down since he stumbled across this. They gave him their
cards and told him that if another body came in to do exactly what he
had already been doing and to immediately send them the results if they
were unable to be there in person to witness the autopsy. Matt nodded
and thanked them profusely. They turned and headed toward the elevator
and punched the floor for ICU.
"What did you think about that Jim?" Mitch asked while the elevator
hummed toward its first stop.
"He was right about the class A weirdness part. But what it means I
haven't got a clue."
"I'm going to check the FDS again. I've got a few things I can try that
I'm pretty sure that he can't do."
"You got to love Detective privileges," Jim said quietly.
The door opened on the second floor and about a dozen people crowded
into the elevator. Jim and Mitch stopped talking and waited until the
elevator doors opened onto their floor. They wormed their way through
the crowd and stepped onto the floor.
Jim didn't see Singh anywhere in sight. The desk nurse had stepped away
for a moment but they only had to wait a couple of minutes for her to
come back.
When they told her that they were here to join Detective Singh her face
froze. Whatever it was that caused that reaction in her it was in no way
good Jim decided. She called over another nurse and asked her to man the
desk while she took them into the back.
The other nurse looked at Jim and Mitch and turned to the charge nurse
and mouthed 'that one' quietly. The charge nurse simply nodded her head
and didn't say anything more other than she would be back in a couple of
minutes.
She led them down the long hallway behind the nursing station. Most of
the doors were closed and those rooms that had windows facing the
hallway for observation were mostly closed as well. Unlike the basement
walls the walls here were a lighter cream color but except for the
absence of the undercurrent of decay there was still the same
overpowering odor of disinfectant reeking from every surface around
them.
"He's back by isolation room four," she said briskly as they turned
another corner.
Jim could tell that if ever he had seen a woman that was spooked by
something it was this woman. She was in her mid-thirties and after being
a nurse this long she would be as hard in her own way as he was toward
things that happened on the job. It wouldn't make her callous, but you
had to be hard to handle what their jobs threw at them and not crack up
yourself. So, if she was spooked by something, Jim wasn't sure that it
wasn't something that he was probably going to be disturbed by as well.
But then he was already disturbed more than a bit. Despite how much they
downplayed what it was that they could do, what Matt had showed them in
the morgue was disturbing on a whole other level and he was already
certain that when they told Singh about it he would be after some
answers as well as soon as they got this Grove business settled. Singh
was speaking with a tall older man when they rounded a final corner and
the charge nurse handed them off and turned back to her desk.
As they approached them Jim could both tell that whatever the two men
were saying it was both hushed and urgent. As they heard the soft
muffled footsteps from the two detectives' approach both of them ceased
their conversation and looked in their direction.
"Where have you two been?" Singh said. "I expected you both here almost
an hour ago!"
"We went to the morgue Singh..." Mitch started to say before Armin
interrupted him.
"Why in the blazes did you go to the morgue when you needed to come
here?" he said just a little irritated at what he viewed as self-
evident.
"You said he flat-lined," Mitch answered. "Where else would we look for
him?"
"He wasn't down there anyway," Jim said. "Did you have the body sent
somewhere else? Because of what happened?"
Singh looked at both of them and his face drooped and he hung his head
before shaking it slowly.
"I am such a fool," he said after a moment. "I should think more
carefully about the words that I chose, especially in matters such as
these."
Singh gestured to isolation room four. "A couple of hours ago, Hank
Phillips did flat-line, but gentlemen, as you can see, he is far from
dead."
Jim and Mitch looked into the observation window of the isolation room.
Hank Phillips lay almost motionless in the hospital bed. The monitors
were placed facing the observation window at an angle that he could not
see them from where he lay. From the lack of response any sound from the
warning system had been suppressed as well.
They could see the warning lights indicating that the patient was absent
almost all indications of life and they knew that there should be
multiple high-pitched warning sounds warbling from the instruments, but
there was only silence. As they watched him lying there, he absently
raised one hand to scratch at one of the many minor injuries that had
been bandaged when he was brought in.
"Shortly after he arrived his breathing became erratic, and that was
swiftly followed by an extreme period of tachycardia. Before the
response team could even begin to assess his condition he abruptly
ceased to breath and his heart stopped mid-beat. As the doctor informed
me, they immediately started CPR. Less than one minute after he had
crashed, he was on a ventilator and they were using the defibrillator;
first at a low setting but then rapidly applied up to the maximum
setting. The response team followed every protocol they have and there
was no response and no change in his condition."
"They realized that they were dealing with something beyond their
experience when they tried to administer adrenalin directly to the
heart. The cardiac needle barely even penetrated that deeply and when
they tried to drive it in a second time it broke. Throughout the entire
procedure Mr. Phillips remained unresponsive. There was one measure of
his vitality that did not cease however."
"His brain functions since he was admitted have been operating at an
unusually high level; when his cardiopulmonary systems crashed that did
not. His EKG did exactly the opposite. It spiked even higher and those
readings have remained at a consistently high level ever since. He
regained consciousness shortly after the crash team gave up attempting
traditional methods of resuscitation."
"The doctor was just telling me when you gentlemen arrived that his
preliminary blood work is complete and what they found is in their
experience impossible."
Singh looked at the doctor and indicated that he should be the one to
relay the results. The doctor nodded to him in acknowledgement and faced
the two detectives.
"I assume from Detective Singh's tone that you men are conversant with
the unusual aspects of Mr. Phillips circumstances?"
"That's putting it mildly," Mitch answered. "We're so conversant with it
that it's about a meter above both of our heads. We're practically
saturated in it."
"We were the ones who initiated the initial containment of the zone with
Detective Singh yesterday," Jim said.
The doctor merely nodded to them both. "I just needed to be sure before
I divulged these results. As you know this is an extremely sensitive
area of examination and not just for local authorities. What is
happening here is already being felt much higher than any of us at this
level."
He motioned for both of them to come closer and began to flip through
papers fastened to the patient chart in his hands until he reached the
one, he was looking for.
"This is Mr. Phillips's blood-work taken when he was admitted earlier
this morning. This..." he said pointing to one part of the printout,
"...is his white cell count. It is literally the highest white cell
count that I have ever witnessed in a patient in almost fifteen years as
a doctor. At first glance it appears that he has suffered a major multi
systemic infection and the body has initiated a massive cellular
response to fight it. With levels such as this in conjunction with his
other body chemistry levels it would appear that whatever had sparked
such an insane production level of white cells had been able to fight it
off and that we could expect to see a steadily decreasing white cell
count."
He flipped to the next sheet and pointed to a similar printout. "Within
an hour his white cell count had almost doubled. I have never seen
anything like it. His blood stream is literally swarming with white
blood cells at this point. At the same time..." The doctor flipped to
another section of the chart. "...his EKG began to steadily, randomly
spike and then stabilized into a rapid climb. His EKG was registering
activity on a scale I have never seen before and he was still
unresponsive. A few times, when it reached the higher levels, its output
exceeded the levels that the EKG could register. When it did that the
EKG started reporting low level brain activity. Whatever is causing this
he has literally broken through the scale.
He changed the paper and pointed at the results. Two hours after the
onset of his acute cardiopulmonary failure we monitored an extreme drop
in white cells and just as unthinkable almost as high of a drop in red
blood cells as well. After we ceased efforts at resuscitation, I ordered
regular samples to be taken and a full workup done on them."
He turned back to the paper that he had been showing Singh when the two
of them walked up. "This is the situation as we understand it now
detectives. Mr. Phillips's EKG continues to register at extremely high
levels. The reading that you see displayed there looks a little higher
than normal, but that is actually representing a rise of nearly four
times a normal person's higher brain functions. Along with that high
level of brain activity there has still been little change of his
condition. He is awake now, but he seems to be functioning at an
extremely low cognitive level. He is aware of people and does make some
minimal response but mostly he does very little. He has ceased to have
either heartbeat or lung function and his body temperature has been
steadily decreasing to match the ambient temperature around him. The
last set of blood analysis that we were able to make any sense of showed
no trace of white cells and an unsustainably low level of red blood
cells. I don't know why he isn't dead. By every measure we have, except
for brain metabolic activity, that man in there should not even be
alive. And I have no idea why he is."
Jim looked at Hank Phillips through the glass of the observation window.
"Is what is happening to him contagious doctor? Is it possible that
whatever is affecting him has already been spread to others?"
"It is a distinct possibility detective. I've never seen anything like
this before. The CDC is already on the way and frankly I'll be glad to
hand it over to them, whatever this is it's rare to the point of
obscurity and I don't feel competent enough to deal with it," the doctor
answered.
"Have you instituted quarantine procedures for those who came into
contact with him?" Mitch asked.
"I ordered a full quarantine the moment that Mr. Phillips was
established as alive when he should be dead. All personnel that have
been in contact with him have been sequestered in the other isolation
rooms on this floor and are being rigorously observed at the moment."
"How many people is that?" asked Mitch.
"A little over a dozen at the moment," he answered.
"Any chance that there could be contact that you don't know of?"
"We're investigating that now. The biggest wild cards are the paramedics
and the nursing staff. The paramedics were pulled from duty and were
called back. They didn't report any contact yet, but we can't be
absolutely sure."
"When do you think you could hazard a guess about this doctor?" Jim
asked.
"Assuming that whatever is affecting him has a rapid development, I
would expect that if it is infectious, symptoms will begin to present in
the paramedics within the next twelve to twenty-four hours. That is of
course assuming that this condition has a minimum incubation period,
followed by a highly contagious phase two. Something I think very likely
since we can narrow Mr. Phillips's own contraction of whatever this is
to within the last forty-eight hours."
"So, what are our possibilities then, realistically?"
"The best case is that this is something that is confined to Mr.
Phillips alone. That it is not a disease and is possibly a reaction to
an outside influence that is not disease based. Like a chemical
contamination or an unknown reaction to some kind of radiation exposure.
In that case we have one individual whose continued existence is an
aberration and an anomaly."
"And the worst case?" asked Jim.
The doctor exhaled and looked away from the still form of Hank Phillips
and directly at Jim.
"The worst case is he just became patient zero. That whatever he has, be
it viral, bacterial, fungal or microbial is not only highly virulent but
is spread aggressively possibly across multiple vectors. In that case
we're looking at an infection that could be spread by touch, by body
fluids and possibly even airborne contamination. Worst would be all
three simultaneously. It will have a rapid onset and we will probably be
unable to prevent it from spreading throughout the population. In that
case the only way to contain it would be to create a quarantine zone
that enforces separation from the larger population with lethal force.
The only good thing I can say at this point is that whatever this it has
not killed him. The problem is that we don't know if this is just an
intermediate stage or if this is the final result."
"And if it's the final result?" Mitch asked.
"As fast as this appears to spread once it has been introduced into the
body's systems, I don't see how anyone who is in an infected zone would
even be alive after two weeks. If this is the end stage then by the time
it exhausts its available population, then you would have a zone filled
with people just like Mr. Phillips. Barely conscious and almost unable
to move; I don't know how he is still alive, but without food or water
anyone still living would be the exception rather than the rule."
"And if it's an intermediate stage?" Jim asked.
"I don't even have words to begin to even process that level of
contagion. Let's just say that it would be everything that I just said
and factor in whatever is next after multiplying it at an exponential
rate."
Jim could see the fear in the doctor's eyes and hear it in his voice.
This was a man who was used to at least being able to operate within the
scientific laws that governed the behavior of life from the cellular
level to the human level. Now he was confronted by not only a case that
from the beginning contravened those rules, but also threatened to spill
out to everything around him and include him and all he knew in a
whirlwind of chaos and uncertainty and his spirit trembled even as it
gathered its reserves to stand against it. He had good reason to be
afraid of what he was seeing but he apparently wasn't going to let it
stop him either.
"Is there anything else we should know doctor?" Jim asked him humbled by
the implications that he had just heard.
"Not at this time," he said. "If there is any change you are the top of
the list at the moment."
"Thank you. Keep us posted," Mitch said quietly.
With nothing more to say the doctor glanced at Singh. Singh told him
that he would be leaving with Jim and Mitch but they would be in
frequent contact from now on. The doctor walked briskly away from them.
For a man who was clearly feeling a deep dread over the worst-case
scenario that he laid out, evidence in Jim's opinion that what he had
described was how he privately expected this to play out, he moved with
a serene determination that belied the presence of any fear at all.
He couldn't help but admire the man and wondered how many like him had
been around during the Spanish Flu epidemic. Dedicated healers who
walked into the line of fire deliberately and glared in defiance at two
of the four horsemen while doing whatever they could to stand against
them even if it was very little. The doctor passed out of sight and he
turned back to Singh.
"What is the next step Singh?" Mitch asked in a tone greatly subdued.
Jim could tell that when the doctor started detailing the worst case
that Mitch's mind was already divided without him being aware of it.
There was the problem and there was Amanda and what could he do to keep
her safe from it. Jim didn't blame him for that. He couldn't honestly
say that he wasn't also concerned for the welfare of the people that he
knew and the few he cared about.
"The next step is us having to speak with M'Tehr as soon as possible. We
need to interview that nymph. She is the lynchpin that holds all of this
together."
"Will having the CDC here do any good?" Jim asked.
"The CDC team will have doctors who are familiar with mystical
afflictions as well. They just won't advertise it outside of their
ranks. And when they get here, they will see what I do now," Singh said
looking intently at Phillips.
"And that is?" asked Mitch.
"That at this moment Mr. Phillips is practically radiating a strong
visceral connection to the aether. Whatever happened to him while the
nymph held him captive is still holding him fast, it's holding him fast
and rapidly bringing him under its full sway."
Singh looked away from the barely responsive man in the hospital bed and
started to lead the two men away from the isolation ward. "I had hoped
that once we retrieved Mr. Phillips and Mr. Barnes that we would be
closer to bringing this situation to a close sooner rather than later."
They reached the elevators. Mitch told him that they were parked in the
underground lot adjacent to the morgue. Singh pressed the button and
resumed speaking.
"That outcome is not to be," he said with finality. Events are spiraling
out of control. Try as we must it is likely that this morning's events
instead of giving us a reprieve and instead given us another graver
problem to deal with," he said in his coldly serious tone.
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