Happy, content, Vic Wingate drifted off to sleep.
Malcolm Crow lay in his bed and stared at the ceiling, eyes wide despite the pull of the morphine, cold sweat beading on his face. Everything was quiet now. Val was safe and protected. Even though Ruger was gone, there was now an officer stationed in her room, just as Jerry Head was now parked in his room.
Weinstock had let Crow stay with Val all the way up until the drugs knocked her out, and then he’d kissed her — kissed his fiancée! — and then allowed himself to be gently urged into a wheelchair and taken back to his room. Despite the painkillers, he hurt, but he didn’t really care. Val was safe.
And Val was going to be his wife.
His wife!
Before she had drifted off to sleep Val had clutched his hand with hers — a small but strong hand now stained with powder burns — and in a desperate voice had asked, “Is it over, Crow?”
Crow had kissed her hand and her lips. “Yeah, it’s over, baby. He’s dead.” His mouth was full of stitches and it hurt to talk, but that was something they both needed to hear aloud. “He’s dead. Gone.”
Her lip curled as she said, “And I hope his soul burns in hell!” There was still fear in Val’s eyes, but there was steel there, too, and Crow loved her for the strength he saw there. His heart swelled to the breaking point.
“For all eternity,” Crow agreed heartily. He caressed her hair. “We did it, Val — we stopped him. You and me, baby. Your dad can rest now, Val. It’s over.”
“It’s over,” she echoed, and closed her eyes for so long Crow thought that the drugs finally had her, but then she opened her eyes and lifted her hand, looking at the engagement ring sparkling on her finger. “It’s so beautiful…” she murmured and drifted off to sleep.
Crow kissed her forehead and her eyes and her lips and then let the orderly help him back to his wheelchair. His body felt ancient and badly used, but his heart was young. All the way back to his room joy at the prospect of a future with Val kept leaping up inside him, but it was like something on one end of a seesaw. As it peaked and dropped back down, another intense emotion soared up.
A total, abject, and penetrating terror. While he had been with Val he had forced it down into the recesses of his mind, but nothing would compel it to stay there. Ruger’s last words kept echoing in his brain.
Ubel Griswold sends his regards.
How the hell had Ruger known about Griswold? How could he have found out about that killer and how had he known to use Griswold’s name like a hammer to hit him? How? It made no sense at all.
Ubel Griswold sends his regards.
Griswold was dead — thirty years dead. At least, everyone thought he was dead. He had vanished off the face of the earth at the end of the Black Harvest. The Bone Man had been killed for his murder. Griswold couldn’t be alive. It was impossible. So…how had Ruger known about him, and why had he said what he said?
Ubel Griswold sends his regards.
Only two people in all of Pine Deep knew what kind of man Griswold had been — himself and Terry. Griswold had nearly killed Terry, and had in fact murdered Crow’s older brother, just as he had murdered little Mandy Wolfe, and so many others. He had tried to kill Crow, but the Bone Man had been there. Had just chanced to be there, and had come after Griswold swinging a shovel and yelling fit to wake everyone in the neighborhood, and everyone had come running. Maybe Griswold could have killed them both, but when all the neighbors had come running — a mass of people who had been filled with grief and impotent rage all through that horrible season — Griswold had fled.
All those years ago young Malcolm Crow had seen Griswold very clearly in the bright spill of moonlight. He had seen Griswold’s face, had seen it change. Had seen it become the true face of Griswold. He had told his father what he’d seen, and had been whipped for lying.
The Bone Man had seen it, too, and had gone hunting for both the man and the monster. Had he really killed him before the mob had beaten him to death and strung him up on the scarecrow post? Crow had always believed that…but now he wondered.
Ubel Griswold sends his regards.
Griswold had been a monster. So had Karl Ruger, and Crow had seen a change in him, too. The image of Ruger’s eyes turning from brown to red would not leave Crow’s mind. He hadn’t imagined it. No way. Was it the same kind of change? Was Ruger the same kind of monster as Griswold? Or…was he something else? Something different? He thought about Ruger lying on a slab in the morgue down in the basement, and he wondered. Did the morgue drawers have locks? Was the morgue itself locked?
His stitched and battered mouth hurt abominably but he didn’t want more painkillers. They’d just put him to sleep, and Crow was not sure he ever wanted to go to sleep again. Yesterday he had dreamed of Karl Ruger and last night Ruger had shown up. Not exactly the same as his dream, but so close as to be terrifying. If he let himself sleep now, what would he dream? His skin crawled at the thought.
Crow looked over to where Jerry Head sat slumped in the chair leafing through a magazine.
“Hey…Jerry…?”
The officer looked up. He was bleary with lack of sleep, but his eyes were still cop eyes. “Yeah?”
“You…you won’t fall asleep on me now, will you?”
For a moment Head looked surprised, and then a small compassionate smile formed on his lips. He sat up straighter in his chair. “Naw, man. I got your back. You get some sleep. I’ll be here for another hour and then we got one of your local boys, Eddie Oswald, coming on and he’ll sit with you until morning.”
Crow felt relieved. Head was big and tough, and Tow-Truck Eddie was even bigger and tougher. “Thanks, man.”
The morphine was taking him now and the edges of the room were getting hazy.
Ubel Griswold sends his regards.
Before the darkness closed in entirely, Malcolm Crow did something he had not done since he’d been a little boy. He crossed himself and said a bedtime prayer. For himself…and for Val.
As he faded off to sleep he heard, or dreamed that he heard, a sweet guitar playing sad old blues. It comforted him, and the night passed.
Four floors below where Crow slept, in the basement morgue of the Pinelands College Teaching Hospital, the body of Karl Ruger lay in a plastic body bag on the stainless steel table in drawer number 14. The remains of Tony Macchio were three drawers to his left. Henry Guthrie was his direct right-hand neighbor. There were more drawers occupied at one time than at any time since a three-car pile up in Crestville the previous April.
The wall clock ticked the seconds slowly as 3:00 a.m. turned to 4:00.
Inside drawer number 14 Ruger’s body was still and cold. There was no blood moving through his veins. His lungs were collapsed, his heart as still and cold as a stone. His muscles, once so strong and deadly, were flaccid, and his brutal hands were limp.
Only his eyes were open. Wide and unblinking, staring up at the utter blackness of the inside of the drawer.
Wait! a voice said in his mind, and Karl Ruger’s dry tongue flicked out over his lips once, twice, then vanished back into his slack mouth. After a while he closed his eyes.
And waited.