Authors: Shirley Rousseau Murphy
I
T WAS FULL
night when two hobos, dressed in dark clothes and bearing heavy backpacks, had come walking down the winding grade that cut through from Highway 68 down onto Molena Valley Road. As they turned right onto the shoulder of the dark two-lane, the light of a half-moon illuminated the surrounding bushes and trees as if ragged and ghostly figures were watching them in the night. Heading west along the dirt shoulder, moving in the direction of the ocean some twelve miles beyond, they watched for a deserted side road, somewhere to get off the highway and camp for the night, maybe a denser woods than these scraggly, stunted oaks, or maybe some deserted old house or barn where sheriff's deputies wouldn't come nosing around to hassle them.
They'd parted from the slat-sided farm truck they'd hitched a ride in, up at the top of the grade, the driver hauling crates of chickens, coming over from Salinas. Truck stunk real bad of caged chickens, the smell still clung to themâor maybe it was the dead chicken they carried, dangling by its feet. Riding in the back in the truck bed, they'd slid open the nearest crate, hauled out an old brown hen and wrung her scrawny neck, her squawks hidden by the rattle of the truck's old engine and loose body. Now, by the time they'd hoofed it down the grade, they had their dinner already bled, cleaned, and plucked.
The narrow road was dark as hell, no car lights streaming by, no houselights off to the sides, and none of them fancy overhead vapor lights out here in the boonies to pick them out moving along the blacktop. In their dark old clothes, they were part of the night itself, blending into the hill that rose steeply on their right. Half a mile down, they crossed the two-lane and stepped off into the shadows of the berm, moving along beneath another stand of scraggly trees. When they came on a battered station wagon sitting there on the berm, they stopped to look it over, watching for movement within.
Nothing stirred beyond the dark, partially covered windows. They approached warily, with a keen and predatory interest. The oddly shaped curtains blocked their view through the windshield and through the driver's window. They tried the doors but they were locked. Cupping their hands to peer into the back, they couldn't make out much more than a long, dark lump in the darkness, a bundle of some kind, but then they snickered and pressed their ears to the glass.
“Guy asleep in there, snoring. Dead to the world.”
“Here, hold the chicken. Hell, don't lay it down, you want gravel in our supper?” Slinging off his pack, the taller man reached down into it and fished out a long, heavy wire that he kept in the side pocket, a carefully recycled coat hanger fashioned for just such emergencies. Hauling a flashlight from his coat pocket, he shielded its light, moved to the driver's window, peered down where the beam led, and got to work.
D
EEPLY ASLEEP IN
the car, Vic's dreams carried him through scattered stirrings from a bumbling childhood, as his father moved them all from one small town to another, one sorry job to another, one miserable grammar school to another. His father was sometimes absent altogether, while he did a short stint in some two-bit jail, but mostly he was traveling, dragging the nine kids and wife behind him like cans tied to a stray dog. The dreams were always the same, of a sorry and muddled past without shape and without hope. Maybe it was the scuff of footsteps in the gravel outside the Suzuki or maybe the faint scrape of the coat hanger as it slid in through the crack in the window that stirred him, that sent his dreams careening down into the dark nightmare chasm where one twitches and moans and cries out, where one would try to pry himself awake again, if he'd
known
he was asleep.
He woke feeling hands tightening around his throat. This was not part of the dream, cold hands and rough, cold air sweeping in through the open car door, and the ripe stink of an unwashed body and unwashed clothes, and a bright light blazing in his eyes so he couldn't see.
“You got money, hand it over.” The guy had his knee on the blanket, gouging into his ribs, leaning his body full over Vic, close and threatening.
“I got no money. If I had money, would I be sleeping in this heap?”
The other door opened, second guy flashed the beam over the mess of broken toys. “Where's your woman and kids?”
“I got no woman and kids. I borrowed the car.” He had no weapon handy, either. He'd been asleep, for Christ's sake, peacefully minding his own businessâand with what little money he had left, that that contractor woman hadn't found, tucked deep in his pants pocket. He should have hid it better before he went to sleep but he'd wanted it on him in case the cops showed up and he had to leave the car, make a run for it. He tried to sit up, tried to push the guy's clutching hands away from him, and it was then that he saw the knife. The guy with the flashlight had a switchblade in his other hand, the knife open and gleaming.
“Take the car if you want,” Vic begged. He fished in his pocket for the keys then knew he shouldn't have done that, maybe the guy thought he had a weapon. The knife flashed in the beam, he felt it go into his throat, it went in so easy, like slicing butter. He felt nothing more for a minute, then pain exploded. He heard himself screaming and then he couldn't scream. He felt the blood bubbling up and he couldn't breathe . . .
Vic's own scream was the last sound he ever heard, the last sound he would ever make. He lay dead in the backseat of Debbie Kraft's battered Suzuki. Blood spurted for a minute more and then stopped, his heart no longer pumping. The bleeding subsided to a dribble like a faulty tap, and stopped. He lay in his own blood, his own bodily wastes seeping out as his killer picked up the dead chicken from the front seat, and fished in Vic's pocket for the car keys.
B
EFORE ANYONE KNEW
of Victor's death, the cats waited hopefully for the law to pick him up, for a sheriff or the CHP to spot the Suzuki and pull Vic over, cuff him, lock him behind bars, and transport him back to Molena Point for arraignment and to stand trial. None of the cats allowed that justice might go awry and that Vic might walk, cats are ever hopeful, they didn't want to think about failures of the U.S. justice system, they expected ultimate punishment for Amson. Maybe it was the cats' expectations, sparked by divine fate, that had prompted Victor's own peers to deal out his retribution, to provide his last judgment in this world, in a far more decisive manner than the law would have done.
But now, at this moment, Kit wasn't thinking of retribution. Having just heard the current police report on Amson, and sure he would soon be apprehended, she smiled with satisfaction but then set those thoughts aside as she sought a way from Pedric's hospital room out to the waterfall.
Max and Charlie Harper had just left, heading back to MPPD where a call had come in from a horse rancher up in the Molena Valley. His teenaged boy, out riding one of the yearling colts, had come on the Suzuki in the dark, the scent of death sharp to the colt's senses so the young horse would not approach the car. Curious, the boy remembered a TV newscaster's description of the Suzuki, and of Amson. He didn't pause to see if Amson was in there, he hurried his horse home and dialed 911. The county dispatcher had routed him through to the sheriff's office and then to MPPD. At once sheriff's deputies had moved in that direction, and now were searching again along the two-lane roads though they had driven that area the night Vic had fled. Kit prayed the sheriff would find Amson and treat him as he deserved. But once she'd wished the worst for him she'd dismissed him and turned her attention to the garden again and to slipping out into it.
Able to prowl the room now that the Harpers had left, she had quickly followed the thin draft of cooler air that teased her from the far end of the room. Padding down to look, she found the narrow window, half concealed beyond the last pillar. Eagerly she set about opening it.
The room lights had been turned low. Lucinda and Kate sat by Pedric's bed, the three of them deep in conversation as Kit slipped up onto the sill, finessed the hinged screen open with a soft paw, and pulled at the window handle. Yes, it flipped up. Pushing the glass out four inches, she was through and out into the night, into the damp and sweet-scented garden.
Beyond the small trees and scattered bushes the hospital building rose up on four sides, some windows dark, soft lights shining in others behind drawn shades. Did sick people prefer privacy over a glimpse of the more fascinating world? Only in Pedric's room were the shades still up, the room as bright as a lighted stage. Pedric in his bed, Lucinda and Kate huddled close, the three of them lost in conversation. She smiled at the little tableau, then spun away, leaping up the rocky escarpment beside the waterfall. Pausing, she patted her paw in the falling water and then danced away; she spun, she bounced up the rough ledges to the very top where she crouched in shadow among the highest crags then raced away again down the rocks, ducking beneath cascades of falling water and out the other side, wet and giddy.
She played among the falls for a long time but then at last came down the escarpment again slowly, stepping daintily now, dropping from one level down to the next, quiet and thoughtfulâwishing she were not alone. Where the thinnest sheet of water slid down over a little rocky cave, she slipped in through the clear curtain, into a small and secret aerie; looking down into Pedric's room through the fall of distorting water, feeling her fur grow damper, she saw Pedric's door swing open.
In the square of brighter light she saw Ryan and Clyde step inside to join them, they stood by Pedric's bed next to Kate and Lucinda, Ryan talking excitedly. Clyde had placed his backpack on the floor, she watched Joe Grey slip out, heading straight for the windowsill. Leaping up, he made a dark silhouette looking out into the night, marked by his white chest and white paws. But another shadow slipped out, too, and, nose to carpet, he moved across the floor to the narrower window, where he slid through into the garden and disappeared among the bushes. Watching him, she drew back beneath the waterfall and remained still.
He stood in the darkness of the bushes looking up the little hill, taking in the wooded glade and the tall rocky escarpment and the bright, falling water. He looked intently at one part of the garden and then the next, scanning each, and lifting his nose to taste the air. Seeking her? Oh, she hoped he was.
At last he moved on, following her scent up the rough stones, up and up he went over the tumbled rocks and down again, leaping a fall of water where she had leaped but then he stopped, looking around.
Did he wonder if she was hiding and sulking, if she was still angry? The water plashing down before her sang softly; its sliding gleam distorted the garden and distorted Pan himself into a phantom image as he stood scenting out.
Suddenly he headed fast straight up the rocks to disappear above her. She listened but heard only falling water; she lay behind her watery curtain, her paws crossed, and then sat up nervously. Where had he gone? Had he given her up and turned away?
He burst in through the falling water, pounced on her like a lion capturing its prey, he cuffed her, boldly laughing. She struggled free and rolled him over and cuffed him good, too, and he let her. Battling and laughing, pushing each other out into the water, they were soon soaked.
“Let up,” he said at last, but she didn't. “Let up! Listen! They found Amson.”
She stopped battling him. “They got him? He's in jail?”
“No need.” Pan smiled. “He's dead. Knife blade through his throat.”
“Oh, my,” she said. “Who did that? Oh, not Debbie?”
“Not Debbie, but they picked her up,
she's
in jail. Charlie called Ryan and Clyde, and we came over to tell Pedric and Lucinda.”
“If Debbie's in jail, what about Tessa?”
“She's fine,” Pan said. “She's more than fine, I'll get to that. On the way over, we stopped by Wilma's.” Kit imagined the homey scene as they pulled up in front of Wilma's stone house, Pan and Joe galloping through Wilma's deep English garden to the carved front door.
C
OME IN BEFORE
the fire,” Wilma said, opening the door, “what can I get you? Coffee? A drink? A snack for you two tomcats?” She bent down to stroke Pan and Joe.
“Nothing,” Ryan said. “We can't stay.” Joe leaped to the couch beside Dulcie, thinking a small snack wouldn't take much time, but Ryan said, “We're on our way to tell Pedric, we thought you two would want to know.”
“What?” Wilma said, pulling back her loose gray hair and tying her plaid robe tighter around her.
“They found Amson,” Clyde said. “Sheriff's deputies found him out on Valley Road, dead in Debbie's car, his throat cut. Looks like he was robbed. No other fresh tire tracks on the dirt shoulder, maybe someone traveling on foot, maybe some homeless person. They found grocery sacks in the car full of cashmere sweaters, upscale costume jewelry, new handbags, all with the tags still in place, and all too bulky for a person on foot to carry away.”