A flash of lightning caused Paul to twist around and glance upward. “Won’t be long.”
Fortunately, the judge didn’t want to be struck by lightning, either, so he began pinning the class. Two horses remained. The red ribbon fluttered in the hand of the judge’s assistant.
When the announcer called out the second-place horse, the judge then signified Renata for first, and the crowd exploded. Shortro trotted to the judge, and the sponsor of the class held up an impressive silver plate. Manuel hustled into the ring to collect the plate as the sponsor then pinned the ribbon on Shortro’s bridle. He stood still for it, rare in itself.
Then the muscular fellow gave a victory lap in which his happiness exceeded Renata’s. He’d won at Shelbyville.
As they exited the arena, a tremendous thunderclap sent horses and humans scurrying. Shortro held it together, calmly walking into Barn Five. Harry noticed Shortro’s unflappable attitude and thought to herself, “He has the mind for hunting.”
Renata slid off and hugged her steady gelding, tears running down her face as photographers snapped away.
The party was just beginning. Manuel took Shortro back to his stall. Renata followed. The second his bridle was off, she gave him the little sweet carrots he adored.
After answering questions, including ones from yet another TV reporter, lights in her eyes, Renata left the stall. She figured Shortro deserved to be left alone.
As Renata walked to the changing room, Pewter, puffed up like a blowfish, zoomed by her in the opposite direction.
“Afraid of thunder?” Renata laughed.
“It’s horrible! Murphy, where are you?” Pewter called for her friend, who had turned the corner to go into a stall to answer nature’s call.
“What’s the matter with you?” Mrs. Murphy asked.
Before the wild-eyed gray cat could answer, a barn-shaking blast of thunder hit overhead; the lightning was so bright it hurt the eyes, and the rain fell so heavily one couldn’t see through it. But even the tremendous noise of the thunder and the rain couldn’t drown out the bloodcurdling scream that came from the changing room.
T he searing lightning was followed by another bolt, which hit a transformer nearby. People, huddled in the barns away from the lashing rain, heard the sizzle, then pop, followed by another tremendous clap of thunder. Pink and yellow sparks from the transformer flew up in the darkness.
Another scream ripped through Barn Five.
Mrs. Murphy, who could see well enough, called to Pewter, “Come with me.”
“No.”
“What did you see?”
“Go see for yourself. The changing room.” Pewter climbed up the side of the stall, backing down to be with one of the Kalarama fine harness horses. Each needed the other’s company.
Tucker and Cookie, at the other end of Barn Five, ran like mad upon hearing the first scream. They reached the crowded hospitality room. Just entering the hospitality room they could smell fresh blood. They threaded their way through many feet. To make matters worse, people couldn’t see. They bumped into one another. They were scared.
Joan called out, “We’ll have a light in just a minute, folks. Keep calm.”
The buzz of worry filled the air.
Harry kept a little pocket light on her truck key chain. She pressed it. A bright blue beam, tiny and narrow, guided Joan to the Kalarama tack trunks outside the hospitality room. Harry flipped up the heavy lid while Joan pulled out a large yellow nine-volt flashlight.
Larry called in the darkness, “Joan, are you all right?”
“Yes. I’m getting a flashlight.”
Fair, who was with Larry, then called, “Harry?”
“I’m with Joan. Where are you?”
“Shortro’s stall. Checking him over,” Fair replied. “What’s wrong down there?”
“We don’t know.”
Outside, the rain pounded. One could barely make out headlights as cars pulled out of the parking lot before it became too muddy. No one wanted to get stuck. In the distance, the flickering lights were eerie, like white bug eyes that then switched to tiny nasty red dots.
A fire-engine siren split the air as the truck hurried in the opposite direction.
Mrs. Murphy slithered through the people. “Tucker, can you bump your way through?”
Cookie, smaller, worked her way toward the tiger cat. “Here I come.”
Mrs. Murphy thought to herself, “Jack Russells,” but said nothing.
Tucker, tempted to nip a heel like the wonderful herder she was, resisted because there would have been more screams. Tucker saw better in darkness than the humans, but Mrs. Murphy had the best night vision.
The three managed to reach the changing room just as Renata threw aside the heavy curtain, pushing her way through the crowd, blindly knocking people over. The animals dashed in as she bolted out, still screaming, tears flooding her face although no one could see them.
“Oh” was all Mrs. Murphy said.
Tucker approached the corpse, which sat upright on the floor. The heavy, slightly metallic scent of blood filled her nostrils. Blood spilled over the front of his checkered cotton shirt. “Throat slit, and neatly done, too.”
Cookie used her nose, while Mrs. Murphy observed everything in the room, not just the body.
A tack trunk had been knocked sideways; some clothes were off the hangers. Two slight indentations, like skid marks, were on the sisal rug thrown on the dirt floor.
“He didn’t have time to put up much of a fight, but he tried,” Mrs. Murphy noted. “His killer dragged him backward, see.”
Tucker walked over to Mrs. Murphy. “His boot heels dug in.”
The changing room was twelve feet by twelve feet, the size of a nice stall.
Mrs. Murphy, pupils as wide as they could get, also noticed the tack trunk askew. “A human could hide behind that. It’s a huge tack trunk.”
“Maybe he didn’t have to hide,” Cookie replied.
“True enough,” Tucker, now sniffing every surface, agreed.
Apart from her formidable kitty curiosity, Mrs. Murphy possessed sangfroid. She walked onto the man’s lap, stood on her hind legs, and peered at the wound, a little blood still seeping; the huge squirts from when the throat was first severed had shot out onto the sisal rug. As the heartbeat had slowed, the blood ran over his shirtfront and jeans.
Mrs. Murphy didn’t like getting sticky blood on her paws, but there was no time to waste. Who knew when a human would barge in, screwing up everything? She sniffed the wound, noticing the edges of it.
“Whoever did this used a razor-sharp blade or even a big hand razor like professional barbers use. It’s neat. Not ragged.”
“Professional job?” Tucker wondered.
“That or someone accustomed to sharp tools,” Murphy answered.
“A doctor, a vet, a butcher, a barber.” Cookie was fascinated, as this was her first exposure to human killing.
“The cut is left to right,” the keenly observant tiger informed the others. “If he grabbed him from behind, hand over mouth, and pulled his head back to really expose the neck, he’d slice left to right if he was right-handed.”
As the cat scrutinized the wound, Tucker touched her nose to his opened right palm. His temperature hadn’t dropped; the blood hadn’t started to dry or clot. This murder was just minutes old.
“Hey.” Tucker stepped back, blinking.
Cookie, who had touched her nose to his left hand, walked over to Tucker. “That’s weird.”