Bestiary (16 page)

Read Bestiary Online

Authors: Robert Masello

Tags: #Literature & Fiction, #United States, #Mystery; Thriller & Suspense, #Thrillers

BOOK: Bestiary
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Carter moved slowly to his right, the cigar still clenched and glowing between his teeth.
 
 
The first coyote was still watching him; normally, coyotes were afraid of humans and would run for cover, but for all Carter knew, these had become acclimated. Or bold. Maybe the drought conditions had forced them to try some new survival strategies.
 
 
He inched his way up onto the curb—the watching coyote took a step in his direction—and edged toward the tennis court, never taking his own eyes off the animal. Coyotes were great stalkers, he knew—they would follow or chase their prey indefinitely, until the poor creature, exhausted, gave up. And then the pack would descend upon it.
 
 
Carter reached out one hand to the tennis court gate and tried the latch. For some reason, it didn’t go down. He tried again, then, looking away from the coyote for an instant, he glanced at the handle. Which had a padlocked chain around it.
 
 
They locked the courts at dusk, so hard-core players wouldn’t keep their neighbors up at night.
 
 
The coyote that had loped onto his lawn came out again, licking its chops. Two others followed it. And they, too, smelled—then saw—Carter up the street.
 
 
They fanned out, approaching slowly. Carter would appear formidable to them, but the scent and sight of a baby they would find irresistible. Their tails, Carter noticed, had extended horizontally from their bodies—a clear sign of aggression.
 
 
He could try a run for it, but he’d never make it through them to his own front door. And it might just encourage them to attack.
 
 
He looked in vain for any sign of the nightly patrol car. But there was none.
 
 
Fear is your friend, he suddenly thought. Learn from it.
 
 
But what? Learn what?
 
 
Fire. Fire is your friend, too.
 
 
And the coyotes’ enemy.
 
 
He anxiously looked around. A bush, with scraggly, dry branches, was a few feet away. He went closer, puffing madly on his cigar. The tip glowed hot and bright, and Carter took it from his mouth and touched it to a brittle leaf.
 
 
The leaf burst into flame, and then the flame raced down the withered branch.
 
 
Carter reached below it, into the bush, and snapped off the now burning branch. It wouldn’t burn long so he had to work fast.
 
 
Holding the branch in front of him, waving it just enough to let the smoke drift their way, he moved down the street toward the coyotes. Still they stood their ground. Carter went closer, toward what he perceived to be the leader of the pack—a scraggly gray beast with glaring eyes and raised ears. The branch was snapping and crackling in his hand, but the flame was also burning perilously close to his fingertips. He wouldn’t be able to hold it for more than a few seconds.
 
 
Joey turned his head to look at the coyotes, but didn’t know enough to be afraid.
 
 
The gray coyote bared its fangs and growled softly. The others gathered closer, moving forward with their bodies close to the concrete, their black-tipped tails rigid.
 
 
The fire singed Carter’s thumb, and before it went out altogether, he tossed the smoldering branch at the leader. Who jumped back.
 
 
And Carter ran, his thongs flapping, toward his own front door. He was clutching Joey under his arm like a running back carrying a football.
 
 
He broke through the line of coyotes, and kept on moving. But he could sense at least one of the animals turning, and dogging his heels. He could hear panting.
 
 
And then he felt fur, brushing his leg. The coyote was going to try to leap up and snatch the baby from his arms.
 
 
He raced along, one thong flying off his foot, and then the other. Now he could run faster. But it still wasn’t fast enough. He could tell another coyote was easily keeping pace with him on his other side. They were hunting as a pack.
 
 
He had just made it to his own driveway—Beth’s Volvo was still parked there, but he knew it would be locked—when he felt a rush of air hurtling toward his neck. And a raging snarl. Something struck him between the shoulder blades, but he didn’t turn around. He heard an angry yelp, and the sound of two animals tearing at each other in a mad frenzy.
 
 
He got to his door and threw it open, then kicked it shut behind him. There was a scrabbling sound, something clawing at the door, accompanied by wild barks and growls. A fight was going on, right outside the door. Carter, still clutching Joey, went to the window, where he saw a furious tussle of fur and fangs. But why would the coyotes be attacking each other?
 
 
He stood, gasping for breath, and realized, to his shock, that one of the battling animals was a dog—a yellow dog. That stray.
 
 
Three of the coyotes had given up and were strung out in the street; the gray one, caught up in the fight, suddenly gave up, too, and scooted away, yelping, his tail down.
 
 
The yellow dog barked ferociously, and stood, with his tail batting against the door, like a sentinel.
 
 
The coyotes took one long backward glance, as if saying
we’ll be back
, then trotted behind their wounded leader back toward the ravine.
 
 
The dog barked again and again, making sure they knew who’d won.
 
 
And Carter, catching his breath, wondered what to do next.
 
 
A light went on in the upstairs of the house across the street—the first time Carter had ever seen that happen.
 
 
Beth, alarmed and standing at the top of the stairs, said, “What’s going on? Carter—what’s happening?”
 
 
“We’re okay,” he said. “We’re all okay.”
 
 
He flicked on the lights so that they flooded the front lawn and driveway.
 
 
Beth hurried down the stairs, fastening her blue robe around her.
 
 
“You’ve got Joey?” she said, puzzled.
 
 
“Take him,” Carter said, handing over the still unperturbed baby. For all Carter knew, Joey had thought this whole thing was a grand adventure.
 
 
Carter went to the door. He could hear the yellow dog, not barking anymore, but panting.
 
 
He opened the door cautiously. The dog had blood on the crown of its head.
 
 
It turned around and looked at him.
 
 
“You okay?” Carter asked. It was a mutt, but mostly lab.
 
 
The dog took a second, then wagged its tail in reply.
 
 
Carter went outside, pulling the door closed behind him, and knelt down by the dog. “You saved my neck,” he said, “you know that, champ?”
 
 
The dog, still breathing hard, just looked at him. He had no collar, no tags. He looked pretty beaten up.
 
 
“I don’t suppose you can tell me your name,” Carter said, tentatively holding out the back of one hand.
 
 
The dog sniffed the hand, waited.
 
 
“How about Champ? Can you live with that?”
 
 
The dog looked like he could. He licked the sweat off Carter’s fingers.
 
 
Carter stroked the dog under the muzzle, where the fur was damp. Then he rubbed the dog’s back. The gash on the top of its head would need stitches.
 
 
“It’s been a long night,” Carter said, getting up. “What do you say you come inside?” Carter swung the door wide open and waited, silently, to one side. Beth, holding Joey in her arms, was standing in the foyer, looking as if she had no idea what was going on. “Honey,” Carter said, as the dog hesitantly stepped across the threshold, clearly unsure if this was allowed, “I want you to meet Champ.”
 
 
CHAPTER TEN
 
 
DEAR MR. AL-KALLl.
 
 
No, that didn’t even look right.
 
 
My dear Mr. al-Kalli.
 
 
Nah, how would he know that Greer was being sarcastic?
 
 
Dear Sir.
 
 
Christ, it sounded like something from a bill collector.
 
 
Greer stared at the computer screen, a cigarette hanging off his lower lip. If he couldn’t even get past this part, how was he ever going to figure out what kind of letter he wanted to write? Or just what it was he wanted to say?
 
 
Ever since Sadowski had told him about al-Kalli living in L.A., Greer had been consumed with questions and plans and possible schemes. He knew there was money to be made out of this, somehow, but he wasn’t sure how to approach it.
 
 
On the one hand, he could simply start with a strong appeal. After all, Captain Greer, as he had been known then, had led a patrol into dangerous territory, solely to execute a mission commissioned by al-Kalli. And in the course of that perilous mission, he, Greer, had been sorely injured. Handicapped. For life. Surely that was due some special compensation, above and beyond the fifty thousand dollars Greer had been given to cover expenses. (He’d arranged to share out twenty thousand with the soldiers he took along, but since Lopez hadn’t come back, Greer had hung on to his cut.)
 
 
But that would be counting on al-Kalli’s generosity and charity. And Greer had no reason to expect he was either generous or charitable. For starters, he was an Arab; for another, Greer had never even met the man. All of his dealings had been through some guy named Jakob, who had given him just enough information—maps and all—to proceed, but not a single thing more. Greer was a pretty good judge of guys like Jakob, and the guy’s demeanor positively screamed secret service/martial arts/M1/Savak/ Mossad, one of those. Greer had gotten back to camp, and even before he was airlifted to the army hospital in Germany, Jakob had showed up to claim the mysterious box. Greer had never even had a chance to try to jimmy it open.
 
 
Or, Greer thought, sitting back in the chair and taking a long drag on the cigarette (his mother hated him smoking in the apartment—she claimed she was allergic, but Greer didn’t buy it for a second), he could simply go straight for the shakedown. “Dear Mr. al-Kalli, I recovered some of your private property—under color of U.S. military authority—from your palace in Iraq, and unless you come across with some additional money in the amount of . . .” How much, Greer wondered, would be reasonable? One hundred thousand dollars? Five hundred thousand? An even million? If only he knew what it was he’d smuggled out for him. “. . . I will be forced to report you to . . .” Who? The immigration office? The State Department? The L.A. City Council?
 
 
God damn it. Greer didn’t even know what he could threaten him with. A man like al-Kalli probably had most people in his pocket anyway. And what if he turned the tables on Greer? It wasn’t, after all, a sanctioned U.S. army mission. And it could open a further investigation into the disappearance of Lopez, who’d first been listed as AWOL, and then, when he never showed up at all, as missing in action. Greer had pushed to make sure that the MIA status happened; that way, Lopez’s wife at least got the death benefit. He was proud of himself for having gone that extra mile for one of his men.
 
 
The computer screen was still mostly blank, waiting for him to come up with something. He went onto the Internet instead, visited a couple of his favorite porn sites, then figured he’d need to give it some more thought. Didn’t writers always say bullshit like that all the time—that their best ideas just came to them out of nowhere, when they weren’t even thinking about it?
 
 
“Derek, didn’t I ask you not to do that?” his mother called out from behind his bedroom door.

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