Читать книгу Something Deadly - Rachel Lee - Страница 10

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“He wasn’t sick at all,” Marilyn told Declan when her tears abated. “Just before I left for my bridge club, we were talking about taking the catamaran to Jamaica next week. He’d been looking forward to that for ages, and with Christmas vacation starting, we decided to sail around the Caribbean a bit.”

“So you didn’t notice anything amiss.”

She shook her head, her eyes filling with tears that this time didn’t fall. “I didn’t notice anything at all, Dec. Not a thing. He hasn’t been sick. He’s been eating normally. He even took a walk before dinner, like he’s always done.”

Declan nodded, gave her hand a comforting squeeze. Much as he’d been trying to hold his own feelings in abeyance since last night, they were still there, and right now his chest ached painfully for Marilyn and Cart. “Not even a sneeze or a sniffle in the last few weeks?”

She shook her head. “I’m sorry, Dec. Everything was normal. He was healthy. So unless there was something he didn’t tell me, nothing was wrong.”

Riding toward his house, Declan noticed for the first time that the streets were empty. At nine at night on these balmy tropical evenings, there were usually plenty of people out for a stroll, or sitting on their porches. Despite the advent of satellite TV, few people regularly spent their evenings in front of the tube. The weather was too nice, the beach too inviting, the shops too attractive. And being such a small community, where everyone knew everyone else by sight, evening was a time to socialize.

Square dancers met in the park; street entertainers dotted the waterfront; ice cream was hawked from shops that were little more than a counter with an open window. The place had a flavor all its own, carefully nurtured by the wealthy inhabitants to be both exotic and Caribbean in nature. Or at least what they thought of as Caribbean. Sometimes Dec felt he’d been caught up in a Disneyesque version of Key West.

But tonight even the marimba band wasn’t playing downtown. The restaurant doors were closed, a shock in itself, since the doors of all the businesses were always wide open. Every shop was closed tighter than a drum. No music spilled from bars; no one strolled the streets; no cars were parked along the narrow side streets except near dwellings.

The word of the quarantine had scared everyone. The panic he had feared had transmuted into people hiding within their closed-up houses. He was driving through a dead zone.

Shaking his head, he turned left on La Puerta, past more closed shops, heading toward his subdivision north of town and its winding, palm-lined streets. As he passed the veterinary clinic, he realized he was only a couple of blocks from Markie Cross’s home. As if the bike had a mind of its own, he found himself on the street in front of her house.

She was home. Lights were on, and as he pulled up along the curb, he saw the head of her dog silhouetted in a brightly lighted window.

Her wolf. That probably explained a lot about the critter, Declan thought as he sat on his bike, engine still rumbling, debating whether to drive on or get out and go to her door. Kato’s silent watchfulness was a whole lot more unnerving than a dog’s barking.

But the wolf had been fairly friendly to him last night, so that was certainly no reason to drive away.

Finally, not even sure why he was there, but unable to forget Markie’s smile and feeling a need for something to brighten his day, he switched off the ignition, climbed off his bike and walked to her front door. As he approached, he saw Kato’s tail wag in a distinctly friendly fashion.

Well, at least one of the residents here welcomed him. With that amused thought, he rang the doorbell.

Markie opened it a minute later, wiping her hands on a dish towel. “Dr. Quinn! What a nice surprise.” A smile spread across her face. “What’s up?”

“Not a damn thing,” he admitted.

Her smiled deepened. “Well, come on in. I’m just making dinner, and I made way too much. Stuffed mahimahi. You’re welcome to join me.”

Fish sounded good. He forced himself to remember that this was a professional visit, coupled with ordinary island hospitality. Because for some reason he wanted to read more into it.

He stepped inside and closed the door behind himself. Immediately Kato approached him, sniffing at him as if he were full of interesting information. Declan waited a few moments, then squatted down, letting the wolf continue his exploration.

“You’re good with animals,” Markie said, sounding as if that surprised her.

“Well, I figure Kato is in the driver’s seat. He’ll let me know when it’s okay to touch him.”

“Yes, he will. Most people don’t understand that. Listen, I’m going to put the mahimahi in the oven. Kitchen is straight back when you’re ready.”

“Thanks.” He smiled up at her, then returned his attention to Kato. Fascinating animal, coal-black with golden eyes. His tail was down right now, as if he were a bit uncertain, but his ears were pricked with full alertness and even a bit of caution as he sniffed the man.

Declan found himself wondering what the dog was learning. Smells of the morgue. Smells of Cart’s body or disease? He hoped not. The taco he’d had delivered for lunch, a decision he’d been regretting ever since? The scent of Marilyn Shippey. That would be fresh. The odors from his drive through town?

But Kato’s world remained beyond his reach, and Declan could only imagine what it must be like to have your most important sensory input through your nose. Did it create visions? Or just feelings? Was it pleasurable? Or merely informative?

Sphinxlike, Kato completed his examination and sat back on his narrow haunches, looking straight at Declan with those golden eyes.

“Hi, Kato.”

The tail twitched a little on the oak flooring and the ears relaxed backward a bit, not submissive, but a hint of welcome. Declan held out his hand, palm up. Kato considered it a moment, then nosed it aside.

Okay, they weren’t that far along.

Then Kato rose and trotted toward the kitchen, honoring the man by being willing to turn his back to him.

Declan straightened, accepting the honor and ignoring the way his knees—battered by too much basketball and soccer—creaked at the change in position.

The kitchen was bright, a mix of stainless steel countertops and appliances, with glass-fronted oak cabinets. The backsplash was steel, too, but the soffits over the cabinets were painted a delightful Chinese-red, bringing a huge burst of color into the nearly monochrome room.

Markie stood at an island, tossing a salad. She greeted him with another one of those smiles and said, “It won’t be long. Have a seat.”

He perched on the stool across the island from her and realized he was salivating for that salad. Physician or not, he didn’t eat nearly as well as he should, for lack of time.

“Somebody’s into cooking,” he said, indicating the kitchen, which did a fair job of impersonating a high-quality restaurant kitchen.

“Yeah.” She gave a little glance, her eyes dancing as she looked at him. With practiced ease, she sliced the fillets open and spooned in a homemade bread-crumb stuffing packed with minced sautéed zucchini, mushrooms and onions. “It’s my hobby. And my therapy. It cuts me loose after a long day at work.”

“I’m surprised you’re not too tired to bother.”

“What else would I do? Watch television?”

“You could walk on the beach.”

She laughed and put the fish in the oven, then began dicing a tomato. Her hands were nearly a blur, moving what was obviously a razor-sharp chef’s knife with a confidence that made him wince.

“That comes later. Although the longer I’m on the island, the less peaceful that becomes. It’s more like going to a huge party.”

He grinned. “Amen. The mountain can be a pretty good bolt hole, though. In the daytime, anyway.”

“I’ve been meaning to climb the volcano cone. I hear the view up there is breathtaking.”

“So is the smell of sulfur.”

She laughed again. “I still find myself wondering sometimes why I’m living at the foot of a volcano.”

“Dormant volcano,” he corrected. “It hasn’t erupted in three hundred years.”

She was a fascinating woman. He felt as if he had her full attention, even while she monitored a pot of boiling pasta and stirred a creamy white wine sauce.

“Just yesterday, in geological terms,” she retorted. Satisfied with the sauce, she turned it down to simmer, retrieved tableware and dishes, and set two places at the bar with cloth place mats and wineglasses. From the refrigerator she returned with a bottle of chardonnay and poured them each a glass.

Dec reached for his and offered a toast. “To hope.”

“To hope,” she agreed.

The wine was crisp on his tongue, and he rolled it around, savoring it.

“So,” Markie said as she began to serve salad into bowls, “what’s going on with the quarantine?”

“Maybe nothing.” Which was true.

“And maybe something?” Her eyes caught and held his, drawing him to places that seemed as haunting as her wolf’s gaze. “Something to do with Carter Shippey?”

“We don’t know what killed him. That’s all.”

Her eyes narrowed slightly, letting him know she didn’t believe that was the full story, but that for now she was going to let it pass.

“How was your day?” he asked her, seizing on any safe topic he could think of.

“The usual,” she said, as if he would know. “The same thing you do, I expect, except I do it on animals.”

A smile flickered across his face. “Dogs and cats?”

“Mostly. Today I had an iguana and a rabbit, too.”

“Your job is harder than mine. You have to know about many more species.”

She laughed. “You know, the basics are pretty much the same for mammals. I have a different slew of diseases to know, that’s all. It gets interesting with the exotics, though. Since coming here, I’ve had to do some cramming. Iguanas, turtles and snakes weren’t something I focused much on before. But if worse comes to worse, I can always call a specialist.”

“The way I do.”

Smiles again, exchanged over the wineglasses.

“I bet,” he said, “you do more sterilizations than I do.”

At that she laughed outright, her eyes dancing merrily. “By far.”

The mahimahi was just coming out of the oven when Kato suddenly appeared in the kitchen, standing at the counter and staring out the window over the sink.

“Kato, get down.”

He ignored her.

“He listens well.” The remark was offered with a laugh.

Markie rolled her eyes. “It depends. When he’s in the mood, he’s obedient. It’s just that he’s rarely in the mood. Kato, get down.”

The fish, on its baking pan, sat on the nearby stove, but the dog didn’t spare it a glance. He was intent on something out back, something in the darkness. And his tail was down.

“I hate that,” Markie sighed.

“When he doesn’t listen?”

“No, when he stares out the window like that.”

“Maybe you’re picking up on his feelings.”

“Could be.”

Then, low in Kato’s throat, a deep growl began.

Markie swung around quickly to look. The chef’s knife had returned to her hand as if by magic, seemingly without her awareness. Declan saw Kato’s hackles rise.

“There’s someone out there,” she said.

“I’ll go look.”

But her free hand shot out, gripping his forearm. “Don’t, Declan. Whatever it is, it won’t try to get past Kato. It’s probably just somebody crossing the backyards.”

The knife in her other hand belied the confidence in her eyes.

“Maybe,” Declan said. “Does he do that often?”

Her gaze wavered. “No.”

“Then maybe I should look anyway.”

“Please. Don’t bother. Whatever it is, we’re safe in here.”

He forced himself to relax onto his stool because it seemed her wish, but he looked at the dog again and didn’t at all like what he saw. Maybe that was what Markie was reacting to, the strength of Kato’s response.

The hair was raised along Kato’s entire spine. His head was lowered between his shoulders as he stared out the window, a definite don’t you dare come near me posture.

“Kato?” Markie called him again.

This time he glanced at her, his golden eyes inscrutable, a small whine coming from his throat. Then he turned back to the window.

The neighborhood erupted.

Declan had his limits, and he reached them as the barking spread like a wave through the surrounding area. Dogs did that sometimes, he knew, but rarely were so many barking at the same time, both indoors and out, and he remembered how they had done that last night, about the time that Carter Shippey had died. It made him wonder about things like poisonous gases. Surely the dogs couldn’t smell a virus?

But maybe they could. Recent studies seemed to indicate that they could smell nearly undetectable enzymes in cancer cells. Why not a marauding virus?

Leaving the delicious aromas behind, he ignored Markie’s protest and stepped out through the sliding glass door onto her patio. The night smelled the same to him as it always did, the soft scents of the sea, the greener scents of the growing things. The ceaseless breeze blew gently.

A sliver of moon rode above, and the light from street lamps helped illuminate the backyard areas of the nearby houses. There was nothing to be seen, except the tossing of palm fronds and shrubbery in the stiffening breeze…and a few dark, deeply shadowed places where nothing appeared to move.

But there was plenty to hear. The yapping and barking filled the night. This wasn’t the idle barking of canine conversation. Something was seriously disturbing the dogs.

He glanced back over his shoulder and saw Kato firmly planted at the sink, still looking out the window. Their gazes met, and there was something in Kato’s stare that made a shiver run down his own spine.

Gradually, however, the barking stopped, a wave of silence moving across the island. Then Kato dropped down out of sight. Whatever the threat had been, it was gone.

Back inside Markie’s kitchen, Declan tried to brush aside the chill that insisted on creeping up his nape. Kato certainly didn’t appear distressed anymore. He was sitting at Markie’s edge of the island, nose lifted hopefully toward the mahimahi.

“Do you feed him from the table?” Declan asked.

“Sometimes. I’m a softie.”

He managed a grin he wasn’t feeling. “Somehow I expected that.”

Markie scooped a serving of pasta into a glass bowl, then put a dinner plate upside down atop the bowl and flipped them over. She quickly spread a ring of diced tomato around the lip of the bowl, and lifted it away, leaving a perfect circle of pasta. Next she gently laid a slice of fish atop the pasta, drizzled the sauce over the fish, and finally added a few sprigs of fresh parsley as a garnish. When both plates were ready, she set them on the place mats with a flourish.

“I give you baked stuffed mahimahi over angel-hair pasta, with a creamy white wine sauce and diced tomato.”

“Five-star cuisine,” Declan said, taking in the aroma. “It’s too beautiful to eat.”

“Thank you, but please do,” Markie said. For just a moment, her eyes sparkled. “You wouldn’t want to offend the chef, after all.”

But he noted that her eyes darkened, and she toyed with her food, seeming uninterested in it. He paused, realizing he hadn’t said grace. Not that he believed a God existed or was interested in his prayers—he didn’t—but it was a habit his mother had ingrained in him from his earliest childhood. Even in his current state of atheism, he did it for his mother, whispering the words and crossing himself before taking up his knife and fork.

Except he didn’t exactly feel like eating, either.

Finally he sighed and swiveled on the stool to face her. “What’s wrong?”

She looked at him, her eyes a bit hollow. “I don’t like the way Kato was behaving.”

“Why didn’t you want me to go out there?”

She looked down at her plate again. Finally she murmured, “The dogs know.”

The back of his neck prickled anew. “What do the dogs know?”

A couple of seconds ticked by; then she shook herself visibly. “I’m sorry. I’m just…a little unnerved.”

“I can’t blame you. After all, they were barking the other night.”

“Exactly.” She smiled wanly. “They have senses we don’t have. Sometimes it can be…scary.”

“Yeah, it can.”

“Do you have a dog?”

“No, it wouldn’t be fair. I’m not home enough.”

“Cat?”

“I’m, uh, not at all fond of cats.”

“No wonder Kato likes you.” She managed a laugh. “He thinks cats should be on the menu.”

Declan chuckled, but it sounded hollow. “Tell me about a dog’s senses.”

She poked at her fish again before looking at him.

“Well, their eyes are extremely sharp. Most people think they’re color blind, but they’re not. The only color they can’t see is green.”

“Really?”

“Yup. When you think about it, it makes sense. An awful lot of the natural world is green. For a predator, it would be a distraction.”

“That’s fascinating. I had no idea.”

“Most people don’t. Another myth is that dogs can’t process two-dimensional images. Kato loves animal shows on TV. He prefers bears, horses, deer…and most especially other dogs. Sometimes I put on movies that have dogs in them just for him.”

Declan smiled. “I like that.”

She shrugged. “On the other hand, people generally bore him. He’ll sit on the recliner through a full hour show about bears, but the commercials bore him.”

“He has good taste.” He shook his head, still smiling.

“If you take a look at my TV screen, you can see how many times he’s poked his nose at it in the last few days.”

Now Declan laughed, and his uneasiness began fading. “Trying to smell?”

“Yes.” She was totally ignoring her dinner now, wrapped up in a favorite subject. “That’s a dog’s most important sense. I think they read entire novels with their noses. When I’m out walking him and he stops to sniff a tree…well, I call it pee-mail.”

He laughed again. “I like that.”

“We know dogs can discern sex in each other’s urine, and whether a female is in heat. Some studies suggest they can also sense the dog’s emotional state—fear, pain, joy—although we’ve really no idea how much they can read. It might be far more than we can imagine.”

“Our noses certainly don’t come close.”

“No, they don’t. But there are some things we do know. A dog can follow a scent that’s weeks old, despite overlaying scents. We’re talking about a nose that’s sensitive to a few parts per billion.”

“I’ll be the first to admit I can’t imagine that.”

“None of us can. It’s a whole different world. And we can’t begin to guess how they process that information. We know they react to it, but we don’t know how they piece it together into their view of the world.”

Declan looked at Kato with new respect. “I wish I could find out.”

“Me, too.” Finally she forked a piece of fish and put it in her mouth. After she swallowed, she added, “Pascal justified vivisection by claiming that dogs were nothing but a bundle of hard-wired responses without any real consciousness, that everything a dog does is instinct, that they’re not self-aware, that they have no ability to reason. That view was widely held for a long time.”

Markie shook her head. “I defy anyone to truly pay attention to a canine and believe that. They feel guilt and shame, they feel jealous, and they make decisions. And they love.” She trailed off and suddenly blushed, a very charming blush. “Sorry. I’m on my soapbox again.”

“That’s okay. I’m enjoying it. Unfortunately, I’ve never owned a dog, so I don’t know any of this.”

He looked at Kato, who was still waiting patiently for a tidbit from Markie, and all of a sudden felt the acute intelligence in the animal’s gaze, sensed that he was being weighed, measured and judged.

“So,” he said, still looking at Kato, “when he gets upset about something, it’s natural for it to unnerve you.”

“That’s the whole point, isn’t it? We allied with dogs a hundred thousand years ago because they have better senses than we do. Because we can rely on them to alert us and protect us.”

“True. He alerted. I was going out to check on it.”

She looked at him again, and her eyes held something almost as unnerving as what was in Kato’s. “But don’t you see, Dec? That wasn’t just an alert.”

“But…”

“No, wait. Kato doesn’t bark like other dogs. His way of alerting me is to stare out a window in silence. A trespasser wouldn’t raise his hackles. This was something a hell of a lot more threatening.”

At that instant, for some utterly unknown reason, Declan felt his own hackles rise and a chill pour down his spine.

His gaze drifted from Markie back to Kato. Golden wolf eyes were heavy-lidded now, as if to convey that the threat had passed, that it was okay to relax.

Declan flaked off a bit of fish, twirled some pasta with it, and finally ate. “It’s delicious.”

The flavors melded perfectly, each bite a bright taste explosion that very nearly drew an ecstatic moan from him. Markie smiled at his obvious enjoyment and joined in the feast. For a few minutes they ate silently.

“Wow,” Declan said, looking at the empty plate. “Just…wow.”

“Thank you,” Markie said, a wide smile creasing her delicate features. “I’m honored.”

“The pleasure was entirely mine, I assure you.”

Markie put the plates on the floor, allowing Kato to satisfy his palate. But the dog gave them barely a sniff. His golden eyes were still fixed on the window.

Declan stayed to help with the cleanup and was just about to leave when his cell phone chirped a chorus of Jimmy Buffet’s “Margaritaville.”

“Dr. Quinn, it’s Tom Little.”

Declan felt his hand tighten on the tiny phone.

“I’m at the Shippey house. You need to get over here. Now. And bring your friends from Atlanta.”

“On my way.”

“What’s going on?” Markie asked.

He looked into Kato’s eyes before turning to her. The dog seemed to know already. “I think somebody just died.”

Something Deadly

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