Tony raced down the street in sheer terror. Raced like a cat with a burning rag tied to its tail by gooder children—only the role of a rag was played by the hand of the frozen corpse dangling on his wrist. There could be no doubt that this hand had been dead before separating from a body, and no rational hypotheses helped any more. Tony shook his arm while running, trying to get rid of the dreadful “bracelet,” but the dead fingers held firm. As if they had been frozen in this position, as if he had not seen and felt how they moved, and rather quickly…
Was the truck pursuing him? Tony ran without looking back, but, anyway, behind him there was neither light of headlights, nor a familiar melody. Possibly, that… that thing could not drive the truck with one hand. Nevertheless, Logan turned at the first opportunity, and having reached the following corner, turned again, already almost convincing himself that he once more had safely escaped the chase.
But, hardly had he left behind the third crossroads, when his shadow forward in the light of headlights approaching from behind him.
“The ice cream truck,” Tony helplessly thought. “Or the postman with a hatchet. Or the bus. Something or someone has caught up with me…”
He was absolutely exhausted and had no more energy to run. And how could he escape from a vehicle? The last few times it had been possible to escape because he had found somewhere to dive. But now ahead was only a straight street with closed rows of houses on both sides…
Tony stopped and turned towards what was overtaking him from behind.
“My God,” he exhaled in the next moment, “At last!”
A police car was slowly approaching him.
Logan had no idea what the officers could do about a dead cannibal driving on the streets and how to explain events to the them without being considered a complete loony, but it was not the most important thing. The main thing—for him personally—was that the nightmare would end now. Let those who are obliged by their duty deal with all the problems. He was ready to rush towards the police with open arms, but understood that it was not a good idea. How would a cop react, seeing in the middle of a night street a suspicious person in dirty clothes with a torn off hand on his wrist? It was better to remain on place and to behave as calmly as possible. Otherwise he could get a bullet from his saviors.
Meanwhile, however, the patrolmen did not seem concerned. The car came nearer without a siren or flashers and without any commands through a loudspeaker. Though, probably, they still simply have not made out the details. Tony stood motionless, stretching his face in the most friendly smile—which, in fact, did not require any special efforts from him.
“And maybe I am indeed a loony,” Tony thought, continuing to smile happily. “And they’ll take me away, give me a nice little injection, and the next morning, I’ll wake up in a warm cozy mental hospital in the normal world.”
The car slowly approached closer. Tony saw that there was only one cop inside, and he was white. Logan never considered himself a racist, but at this moment he was pleased that in a dodgy situation he would be talking with a person of his own race. Then the car drew up next to him. Tony saw on its doors the familiar abbreviations NYPD and CPR. And… the car passed Tony at the same leisurely speed.
Tony could not trust his eyes. Didn’t the cop see what was dangling from his wrist?! This, after all, was not Halloween night! Or simply had the cop not made it out in the darkness?
“Hey!” Logan shouted, swinging his hands and running after the car. “Officer! Wait!”
The car stopped. Tony heard the door lock click, but the policeman did not exit the car. Logan, out of breath, ran up to the front door.
“Officer… thank God! I understand how what I am going to tell you will sound, but…”
Words got stuck in his throat.
For he saw that the letters “CPR” written on the door represented something different than what he was used to. Not “Courtesy — Professionalism — Respect.”
But “Cruelty — Profanity — Rampage.”
The door swung open and the policeman stepped out onto the sidewalk.
When somebody shoots his own temple, he is actually exposed to a significant danger. The danger is that he will survive. And more often than not, the survivor will suffer consequences that disrupt very different brain activities (not to mention purely cosmetic effects, of little matter to a corpse, but not palatable for a survivor). Professionals dealing with gunshot wounds—including, certainly, policemen—know this very well. Therefore, when they decide to end it all with the help of a bullet, they select a more reliable way. Shooting not to the temple, but to the mouth, while directing the barrel upwards and slightly back, to the soft palate. This way, the brains are knocked out in the most literal sense that gives an absolute guarantee of resting in peace.
Or not so absolute.
Anyway, the condition of policeman who got out of the car refuted this guarantee.
The top of his head was gone. The upper part of his skull had been blown away entirely, having left on its place a grinning hole, with everted edges of sharp bone shards to which shreds of hair were stuck. Lower down, whitish lumps of brain, similar to dead slugs, and black gore clots were caught in his remaining hair. The right eye had fallen somewhere inside the skull, leaving a dark pit in its place; the left eye had slid down the cheek and hung on it as a round drop spotted with bloody streaks, still held by a string of nerves stretched from the eye socket. From his nose something hung down like dense bloody snot—probably, also brain remnants. The upper jaw was broken up, and to the right, cracked teeth on bared gums stuck out from under a crooked upper lip. The lower jaw was intact, but powerlessly drooped and slightly rocked when the cop was moving. The chin was wholly covered in blood with small lumps stiffened in it.
But the uniform and the badge were in perfect order. At least, as much as it was possible to judge in the dark.
And the handle of a pistol—most likely the very same—stuck out from an unbuttoned holster.
“E-everything is all right, officer,” Tony squeezed out of himself, moving back. But it was too late—the incarnate horror in an uniform stepped towards him. It moved quickly enough, contrary to zombies in movies.
And then the corpse started talking. It was not very good at it because of the condition of its jaws, so it had to help itself, propping up the lower lip with its left hand. Judging by how dexterously it managed to simulate an articulation, it already had had enough time to adapt to this manner of speech.
“You have the right to scream,” it said, putting its right hand on the holster. “And it can and will be used against you.”
Having heard this version of the Miranda warning, Tony took one more step back. And at the very same time something cold and wet—he felt it even through his trouser leg—touched his leg from behind.
Tony shouted and jumped aside more than two yards; he had not known before that he was capable of such standing side jumps. But the landing was not so successful—under his foot was some slippery rubbish which caused Logan to fall to hands and one knee and tear his palms against the asphalt. In the next instant he understood that, stepping back, had simply bumped into a leaking fire hydrant. But he understood also something more important: the dead cop twisted his head around awkwardly, seemingly having lost his prey.
“His eye!” Despite the nightmarish situation, Logan’s common sense nevertheless got into gear. “It isn’t connected anymore to the eye muscles, therefore, it can look only in one direction. And, to look around, it has to turn its head… or to turn its eye with its fingers…”