Part 18 (1/2)
' Back away now!' Back away now!'
Melody jumped back from the table, staring at the corpse as if she expected it to sit up and attack her. Parker rushed over from the doorway, in a hurry to play bodyguard.
'Whoa! Steady, Doc, you don't have to bite her head off.'
The Doctor met him face to face. 'Don't I? She might find it preferable to the alternative.'
Melody had taken advantage of the pause to recover her composure, and now she met the Doctor with carefully rationed patience. Her surgical gloves were dipped in blood, lending her something of a macabre appearance as she gesticulated with the scalpel. 'Doctor, you're clearly intelligent so I'm not about to dismiss your warnings - but you'll have to appreciate we need more to go on than a note of panic in your admittedly very commanding voice.'
The Doctor accepted the flattery sourly. 'I never panic.
What you heard was urgency. The kind of urgency that's needed when lives are at stake. Even yours. Agent Quartararo 'Well, I'm safely backed away now,' the agent answered tautly. 'so we can all rest easy.'
'Oh, I doubt that.' The Doctor regarded the agents darkly as he approached the table. The corpse lay stretched and open, no longer a life extinguished; rather, a death given substance. 'Your gun may have put paid to this man, but it's highly probable that whatever invaded his system is still very much alive. I could be wrong, but I'm generally at least half right.'
He bit off two words for added emphasis: 'At least.' 'At least.'
Charlene Lowell rolled onto her back and groaned She'd been in bed way too long, but it was G.o.ddarn cosy and she didn't appreciate being woken by crazy banging on the cabin door.
Crazy was right: the double glazing kept the sound of the storm out, but she remembered just how bad it had been last time she'd dared to look out.
Gary mumbled beside her. She reached over the covers and slapped his b.u.t.t. He just grinned, his head firmly embedded in the pillow.
'That's all right, sweets, you just lay there. Lucky for you, I'm in a good mood.' She'd managed to drag him away from that d.a.m.n CB for a few hours anyway: leaning over him, fresh from the shower, telling him if he wanted to get a response, he had to push the right b.u.t.tons. Warm with that and subsequent memories, she sat up and rubbed the sleep from her eyes. Someone's fist was still hammering on the door.
She pulled her robe up off the floor beside the bed and quickly wrapped herself.
'If it's one of the neighbours come to borrow some milk, they sure don't like their coffee black. They can have one carton and a piece of my mind, they keep this up.'
For the briefest second, she wondered if it was Gary's wife, and she laughed at the picture in her head: Lynette on a crusade up from Concord, battling through the blizzard to track them down. She'd have to be one crazy-a.s.s b.i.t.c.h.
Kind of like the woman waiting for her when she opened the door. Except this one was packing an automatic rifle and pus.h.i.+ng another woman into the cabin.
Loss, like a mountain of hurt, cut Amber off from the world and cast her adrift in streets, recently familiar, now altogether foreign. The snowfall was like fog in a blender and she ran on, ghosts of buildings haunting her from all sides.
Sobs racked her lungs and reddened her face even as she vaulted someone's picket fence and landed shakily in the snow. She dragged herself up and hared blindly down the side the house. Some junk tripped her and she dropped on one knee, steadying herself against the end wall. She cried her heart out and smothered her face with a glove.
A dark grey cold filled her insides. Her hand slid from her cheek as she hurled her scream at the sky. The sky that wasn't there.
Her rage cracked, dry and scarcely audible. It caved into a single, shattered sound: 'Daddy.' 'Daddy.'
A slate cloud prowled at the edge of her vision.
Eyes like marbles: moon-bright colour locked in cold gla.s.s.
Amber's breathing was tight and rapid. She felt the blood draining from her cheeks.
The coyote pinned her with its glare. Saliva dribbled over its jaws and dropped in silver-wet strands to the snow. The animal looked mangy and shabby, a fur-clad skeleton. Evil, hungry. It sniffed and padded three or four paces toward her.
Beyond, towards the front yard, she could see more of them: patches of white and grey snuffling around the edge of the house.
It took her an infinity to stand and the coyote studied her all the way. It seemed to expect her to grow taller, none too impressed with her height. A few of its brothers and sisters shambled up behind, starting to show an interest. Amber had returned to the real world.
Low growls drove her back, her hand following the wall.
She nearly fell as she retreated around the corner, decided to turn it into a run.
She sprinted along the back of the house, her thoughts scrabbling around for some escape route. Where was Mom?
Where was Mak? She could manage without them, she could.
Down there! A dog-flap in the back door. Amber threw herself flat and didn't listen for the sounds behind her. She hauled herself through and turned to hunt for the catches. She found them and fastened the flap closed.
With a smile, she slumped down with her back to the door.
Trembles took over her small frame, but relief escaped as a cloud in front of her eyes. The floor felt cold through her gloves. Ice.
There was a thin coat of ice over the kitchen floor. Amber rose slowly, the ice cracking under her boots. Outside, the coyotes growled and sniffed at the back door; the whole pack of them, it sounded like.
Amber walked forward to where the kitchen door hung ajar.
She pulled it slowly open and peered through into a lounge where sheets of ice fanned out over the rug. Some of it was broken gla.s.s, but the TV and windows looked undamaged.
There was a noise. Like a lapping tongue.
A coyote lifted its head to peer over the arm of the sofa.
Amber's heart jumped. Her eyes dropped to where it had been licking. A colourful fish, fragile like a b.u.t.terfly, lay dead, locked under the Ice sheet.
The coyote snarled and curled back its lips to bare Its fangs. Its starved eyes fixed on her.
'You're supposed to be intelligence agents - think! think! What actually killed Mr Redeker there? Or is Central Intelligence another contradiction in terms?' What actually killed Mr Redeker there? Or is Central Intelligence another contradiction in terms?'
Melody's patience, Parker could tell, was thin ice over cold waters, and he hadn't had any to begin with: this Doctor guy needed to be told who did the sarcasm round here. But Melody played the guy's game and said, 'Trauma.'
The Doctor had drawn them into his forum, patronising them like promising students to his brilliant professor. He wielded criticism and encouragement like twin p.r.o.ngs on a pitchfork.
'Precisely!' Parker was prepared to punch him if he stooped so far as to pat Melody on the back. He didn't and his grin faded, like day into night. 'And what, in your professional opinion, did you see in there?'
Parker couldn't believe it as Melody allowed the Doctor to direct her gaze over to the fourth - silent - attendant of their conference. Since she'd fired the shots herself. Parker guessed she'd skipped the painstaking examination of the wound tracks through the 'victim'. Even so, he'd watched her take her time over the post mortem, exacting as ever, peeling back the skin from her Y-shaped (Y for yuck!) incision, sawing through the exposed ribs and removing the breastplate. She'd been making the preparatory incisions prior to lifting out the tree of internal organs when the Doc had interrupted and flipped everyone's lid.
'I don't think any kind of professional opinion enters into it,' she murmured, a shade humbled by what she'd seen.
Parker had leaned in casually, only to be rewarded by the sight of the central cavity infested with tangled roots of ice.
'But for what it's worth, it resembles the beginnings of a new nervous system, composed of ice. Except it can't be ice,' she added, 'because ice doesn't behave like that.'
'No, it doesn't, does it?' The Doctor, Parker was grateful to note, had shed his patronising tone. He stood expectantly, as though waiting for Melody to complete the puzzle.
'You think the trauma affected the invader as much as the host,' she deduced.