Part 19 (1/2)
Claire was standing in the doorway and staring at me and I suddenly realized I had no idea how long she'd been there.
”Do you always talk to yourself?”
”Beats singing. You take the first letter of each sentence and it spells 'MINES AND b.o.o.bY TRAPS.' ”
She thought about it and I added, ”But I forgot the S at the end. That stands for, 'since there was nothing in the area yesterday, don't a.s.sume there is nothing there today.' ”
I put the final pieces into place and then went back inside and Claire followed.
”How do you remember where you put all that stuff?”
”Practice.”
She gave me a hug and I kissed her.
”In addition I'm very talented, skilled, lucky, smart, wise ...”
”That explains all the jail time.”
I ignored her and cleaned up before we went to bed.
26.
At quarter past four I heard the screams start, but they were quickly silenced as though someone put their thumb on the mute b.u.t.ton during a scary movie. At the first peal of noise I'd rolled out of bed and was crouched at the door with the bayonet in hand. By the time I started to think, the screams were just echoes. Listening carefully, I could barely hear sotto voce sotto voce cursing, so I relaxed and put the bayonet back under the pillow. Claire rolled over and threw an arm onto my empty side of the bed. cursing, so I relaxed and put the bayonet back under the pillow. Claire rolled over and threw an arm onto my empty side of the bed.
”Whazamatta?”
I kissed her and she rolled back. When she was breathing deeply again, I went to the bathroom and stood off to the side of the window where I'd cut a slit in the drapes. Through it I could see most of the yard but anyone down there wouldn't be able to see me. The dog came in and I scratched him behind one ear as I let my eyes adjust to the dim light. In the middle of the lawn, there was a large, pale shape lying p.r.o.ne. As I watched, the figure crawled a body's length forward towards the fence and then paused.
”Good boy.”
I scratched the dog some more and knuckled his ear until his rear legs started to spasmodically kick. The figure in the yard was moving like a half-squashed bug and I began to admire its perseverance as it finally reached the right-hand fence. That would mean that the visitor was one of the Kilpatricks, either the big, fat husband or the equally big, fat wife. I wondered if it might be one of the big, fat children but I decided against it, the two girls and a boy were all in their early teens and they weren't as big as the figure seemed to be in the dim light.
The figure had reached the fence and levered itself upright when suddenly it began to spasm wildly before dropping to the ground and shaking its arms wildly.
”Hmmm. I'd forgotten that one.”
Renfield looked up at me uncomprehendingly and I scratched him some more.
In the first light of morning I went out and gathered up the traps. I found the note the intruder had left in the middle of the yard. It was butcher's paper again and it had ”LEAVE, YOU f.u.c.kING KILLER!” written in yellow crayon. As I was reading it, Mr. Kilpatrick, senior, came over to the fence and put his arms gingerly on the top. He was moving very slowly and carefully, like an old man dealing with new pain.
When I noticed him, I waved cheerfully. ”Good morning.”
”You know ...” His arms and face were covered in small, flesh-colored Band-Aids, and he had a p.r.o.nounced limp. He swallowed audibly and started again. ”You know ...”
He stopped and his wife edged out of their back door and peered at me. They were both big people and looked quite alike, both over two hundred pounds and squatly built. They had pale skin, frequently washed, that was rarely exposed to the weather, and lank brown hair that was rapidly graying, although they seemed to be in their early forties. I walked over to the fence and gestured with the folded note.
”Know what, sir?”
I looked into his eyes from an extremely close distance. Mr. Kilpatrick found it uncomfortable so he started to back away until his wife made a harrumphing harrumphing noise and he froze in his tracks and continued. noise and he froze in his tracks and continued.
”You know, it might be a good idea for you to leave.”
It almost came out as a question and I s.h.i.+fted my weight onto the other foot and ignored his statement entirely. Their house was beautifully kept with aluminum siding and bright red paint on the lintels and around the edges of their windows.
”Isn't it a beautiful day?”
He swallowed convulsively. ”Me, and the other neighbors ...”
I interrupted him again. ”Yep, a beautiful day and my wife and me, we were thinking about how lucky we are to have such beautiful neighbors and to live in such a beautiful neighborhood.”
His wife, I think Claire had said her name was Emily, took a step out onto the porch and I could see she was holding a frying pan in her meaty palm. He glanced over at her and went on. ”Well, we think that maybe ...”
”Yep, beautiful neighbors and a beautiful neighborhood and a beautiful city but we don't know them very well, at all. It's really quite a shame.”
He stopped trying to talk and stared so I added brightly, ”So, of course, you'll be coming to our barbecue. Right?”
He turned full face to his wife, who began to shake her head violently from side to side. I looked at her for a moment and then nodded, and she stopped as though someone had cold-c.o.c.ked her. Mr. Kilpatrick s.h.i.+vered then and turned back to me with his mouth a little bit open so I repeated myself and made it into a question.
”Right?”
He nodded dumbly and I handed over the note he'd left behind. ”You dropped this.”
He clutched at the paper until it crumpled and then bolted inside, so I finished cleaning up the b.o.o.by traps. I'd barely picked up the last item when Renfield squealed and darted between my legs and through the open door of the house. I was still rubbing the muscle he'd bruised during his pa.s.sage when a triple fork of lightning split the sky and a hard spring rain started.
After breakfast I'd handed Claire a highlighter marker and half the stack of the pamphlets I'd brought back from the Residential Tenancies office. We sat down at our kitchen table and twined our feet together underneath and went to work. Every few minutes the thunder would come and finally Claire looked up.
”Huh. I didn't know that.”
I criticized her idly. ”Don't grunt, it's not ladylike. What didn't you know?”
”I didn't know about the fire alarms. We're supposed to have fire alarms, three of them, one on each floor. Where's your dog, by the by?”
”In the bas.e.m.e.nt. The thunder scares him. Where's Fred?”
”Trying to escape from his crib. And, dear?”
I looked up and she kicked me in the s.h.i.+n with the side of her foot. ”I'll grunt if I want to.”
”Isn't that a song? 'It's My Party and I'll Grunt if I Want To'?”
She sighed and brushed hair back from her forehead. ”You're not funny, you know.”
”I know.”