The Howling III (10 page)

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Authors: Gary Brandner

BOOK: The Howling III
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“I’d better tell you this,” he said. “I would really like to go to bed with you. I mean it’s been on my mind from the minute I walked in. No, from the minute I put on my best sports shirt to impress you.”

She watched him, her head tilted slightly to one side.

“And if we don’t mess up somehow, I’m almost sure you and I are going to do it.”

She opened her mouth to speak, and he went on quickly, “But I have the feeling neither of us is ready for it right now.”

Holly let out a long-held breath. “You know, Sheriff, you’re a more perceptive man than you let on sometimes.”

“I just didn’t want you to think I was gay.”

“I detected that,” she said. “Those pants of yours fit quite well.”

“Why, you saucy little minx.”

“That’s me.”

Their goodnight kiss was long and warm and deep, and filled with promise.

Gavin drove back toward the Pinyon Inn grinning foolishly in the dim glow of the instrument lights. He had to remind himself that there was still a whole lot he did not know about Dr Holly Lang. Her preoccupation with the occult was one thing that disturbed him. His grin faded as he thought about the boy who lay in Room 108. Gavin thought about him, and about the tales of Drago, and he wondered…

Malcolm’s eyes snapped open and he sat suddenly upright in bed. He sniffed the air and turned toward the window to stare at the darkness outside.

Someone was there. Someone or something. Calling to him. The boy’s thin body tensed. His nerves tightened with a crazy desire to run out there and join whatever waited for him in the night. Beads of perspiration broke out along his hairline.

It was as though he belonged out there, in the night, not here in a comfortable bed. That was his place. And yet… and yet things were different now. He had a friend. He was no longer alone, running, always running. He thought of Holly. Made a picture of her face in his mind. The picture held him where he was. Still, the silent voice called to him from outside.

Another sound intruded. The barely audible pad of the night nurse’s rubber-soled shoes out in the corridor. Malcolm lay back quickly and closed his eyes, feigning sleep. The door opened. The night nurse looked in, listened to his regular breathing, and backed out again.

Malcolm did not rise. The call from the night was still there, but weaker now. He could block it out if he tried. By and by he fell into a shallow sleep that was troubled by strange urges and wild dreams.

*****

Out on the hillside, yellow-green eyes glared across at the many windows of the hospital building. The beast growled from deep in its massive chest. The one it sought was inside, that much the beast knew, but there were too many conflicting scents to tell which of the windows was the right one.

The beast made a complete circuit of the building, staying in the deepest shadows, going to a low, loping run when it had to cross the paved parking area. Instinct cried out for it to smash through the glass doors at the entrance and savage any human that crossed its path until the boy was found. Reason told the beast that this was not the way. It was a time for cunning. The killing would come later.

Effortlessly the beast climbed the hill behind the building and slipped down into the shallow valley beyond. There beneath a bush it found a neatly folded pile of clothing. The beast sniffed the air, judged it safe, then lay down next to the clothing and curled its powerful body in on itself as the painful transformation began.

CHAPTER TEN

Malcolm awoke sweating.

The grey rectangle of the window told him it was early morning. The sensations of last night jolted back into his consciousness. He remembered the terrible certainty that something out there in the woods had called to him. His own wild urge to answer that call. Then the quieting mind picture of Dr Holly Lang, and the troubled dreams that followed.

He strained his senses now, and he could still feel the presence of something out there. It was much fainter now, but not completely gone. Malcolm was frightened, yet his blood surged with a strange exhilaration. He resolved to tell Holly all about it. She would understand. She would know how to help him.

A few minutes later the door opened and a nurse entered. She had orange hair and a lumpy potato nose. She was not one of the nurses Malcolm had seen before. She carried a small tray that was covered with a white cloth. When she set the tray down on the table across the room from his bed it made a little clinking sound.

“Well, already awake, are we?” the nurse said in that fake-cheerful voice they use. “And my, how chipper we look. Did we have a good sleep?”

Malcolm did not bother to answer. He knew the nurse wouldn’t pay any attention to what he said anyway.

“Are we ready for a surprise this morning?”

Malcolm turned his head away.

“Malcolm’s going on a little trip.”

He turned back to look at the nurse. She had a mole on the side of her neck with a single orange hair growing out of it.

“I thought that might interest you,” she said brightly.

“A trip where?”

“That’s going to be the surprise. I don’t want to spoil it for you.”

A oily-haired man in a white doctor’s coat came through the door. Malcolm remembered him. He was the nasty one who gave Holly a hard time when Malcolm was first brought in.

“This is Dr Pastory,” the nurse said like she was giving him a great big present. “He’s going to beyour doctor now.”

“I don’t want a new doctor.”

“You don’t know how lucky you are,” Potato Nose told him. “A lot of people in your position don’t have any doctor at all.”

“Where’s Holly?” Malcolm said.

Pastory spoke for the first time. “Dr Lang has other patients to attend to.” His voice was as oily as his hair.

“I’d rather have her.”

“You will find, Malcolm, that in this life we don’t always get what we want.” He turned to the orange-haired nurse and said in a low voice, as though Malcolm could not hear, “Give him fifty ccs.”

The nurse lifted one edge of the white cloth and took something from the tray she had brought in with her. She held it down low, shielded by her body, so Malcolm wouldn’t see it. He knew what it was though.

“How about rolling over for me, big fella,” she said, all palsy again.

“What for?”

“We’ve got to poke a little medicine into you, that’s all. A tiny pinprick in your bottom. You’ve had them before.”

“But what is it?”

“It will make you feel better.”

“I feel fine.”

Dr Pastory moved over closer to the bed and frowned down at Malcolm. His eyes were small and bright, and there was something in them Malcolm didn’t like.

“Do as the nurse says, Malcolm. We have some strong young fellows working here who can come in and flip you over if you won’t co-operate. Do you want me to call them?”

Malcolm looked at the nurse and saw he would get no help from her. Feeling trapped, he rolled over on his side, facing away from them. The nurse yanked the blanket and sheet down and pulled the short hospital gown up to expose his buttock. He felt the sharp sting of the needle and a tightening of the flesh down there as something was pumped into him.

He felt the needle slide out and smelled the tang of alcohol as the nurse swabbed him off. She gave him a familiar little pat and pulled the gown back into place. Malcolm rolled on to his back and looked up at the two of them.

“That wasn’t so bad now, was it?” the nurse recited.

“I want to see Holly,” Malcolm said. “Dr Lang.”

Pastory showed his small, even teeth. “I’m your doctor now, Malcolm. You’d better get used to that.”

Malcolm felt a tingling sensation spread over his body. He braced his hands and tried to sit up, but found he was dizzy and lay back down.

“Just relax,” Pastory told him. “Don’t try to fight the medicine. You can’t win, you know.” The words had a funny echoing sound.

“I don’t want to relax. I don’t want you for my doctor.” That was what Malcolm tried to say, but it came out all mushy. His tongue felt thick and foreign, like a hunk of strange meat.

“The more you fight it, the more trouble it makes for everybody.” Pastory’s oily little face swam in and out of focus.

With a great effort Malcolm sat up. The doctor reached for him and Malcolm batted his hands away. “You’re not my doctor,” he mumbled.

Pastory bared his teeth, and for a moment Malcolm thought the doctor was going to strike him. But he got control of himself and turned to the nurse.

“Better give him another fifty ccs.”

“But doctor, for a boy his age that’s -“

Pastory’s little eyes flashed, though his voice remained calm. “Please do what I ask, Nurse.”

With her cheeks reddening, the nurse turned her back and did something with the things on the cloth-covered tray. Pastory stared impassively down at Malcolm.

“Don” wan” any more shots.” Malcolm had trouble getting the words out past the tongue that did not belong to him. “Wan” see Holly.”

“Will you hurry?” Pastory snapped at the nurse, who was still fumbling at the tray.

“No more shots,” Malcolm said feebly.

The orange-haired nurse turned toward him, making no attempt this time to conceal the hypodermic needle. She reached down with one hand and flipped Malcolm on to his side as easily as though he were stuffed with straw. His body would not respond to the messages sent by his brain.

He barely felt the second needle prick. The nurse eased him over on his back and he watched as she and Dr Pastory floated side by side in some murky void. The room grew warm, then hot. Malcolm could feel the sweat rolling off him, but he could not move a hand up to clear his eyes. His power of speech was gone. All he could manage were soft grunting noises. The light grew dim, and dimmer.

“That’s done it.” Dr Pastory’s voice floated to him through a long tunnel, distorted and barely audible. “I won’t be needing you any more, Nurse.”

The shadow-shape that was the nurse floated back away from him and disappeared. Dr Pastory went away too, but just for a moment. Then he was back with somebody else. Another man. The features were only a blur to Malcolm, but he sensed that the newcomer was not a doctor or a hospital employee. He smelled wrong. There was none of the astrigent tang of surgical soap, medicine, and alcohol that clung to the hospital people. This one smelled of tobacco, stale sweat, and urine.

Malcolm felt himself lifted roughly from the bed and placed on another flat, yielding surface. He sensed the door to his room being opened, and he was floating out through it into the corridor. No, not floating, rolling on soft rubber wheels. Rolling, rolling. The fluorescent lights passed overhead in dim, wavery images, as though seen from underwater.

Suddenly the air was cool on his face. There was a breeze with the scent of pine in it. He was outside. A dim recollection of a voice that called him from out here fought for a space in his consciousness, but the drug was too strong.

Malcolm was lifted again, placed inside some sort of metallic box. A van. Dr Pastory got in beside him. He gave an order. An engine fired and Malcolm sensed movement. Then the fever returned and consciousness slipped away.

*****

At ten o’clock Dr Dennis Qualen strolled in through the entrance of La Reina County Hospital. He was, as always, impeccably turned out. Today he had chosen a dark-blue worsted with muted pinstripe and a tie of pale yellow. He acknowledged the greetings of staff and employees with a nod and half smile. Dr Qualen did not believe in becoming too familiar with the people under him, particularly since he did not intend to spend one day longer than necessary at La Reina. He had feelers out to bigger institutions in San Francisco, Houston, and Miami. Once he had straightened out the budgetary problems here, and had the figures to show it, he would surely be hearing from them.

He rode the elevator to the second floor, passing an encouraging word to a small boy in a wheelchair. The boy stared at him dully. He watched as the nurse wheeled the boy toward the orthopaedic ward, then turned and walked briskly toward the glass doors to Administration. Once beyond them he felt a tangible relief. Those doors represented a barrier to Dr Qualen that kept the sordidness of disease and death separate from the nice clean business of running a hospital.

He barely noticed a neatly dressed young man with sandy hair who sat in one of the chairs across from the reception desk. A salesman, the doctor surmised. Some new wonder drug, or a piece of expensive equipment that no modern hospital should be without. La Reina was not in a buying cycle at present, but Qualen tolerated salesmen for the gossip they carried of the outside medical community.

The doctor smiled cooly at Mrs Thayer as he went by. For his own taste he would have preferred a receptionist with a bit more style and better tits. However, he knew that the matronly Mrs Thayer gave his office a solid, businesslike appearance. And she was excellent at guarding his door from patients and other unwanted visitors.

As soon as he settled himself in the burgundy leather chair behind the mahogany desk, the intercom buzzed. With a sigh he reached over and flipped the switch.

“Yes,Mrs Thayer.”

“A gentleman out here to see you, Doctor.”

“Who is he with?”

“Apparently he is not representing any firm.”

“Then what does he want with me?”

“He says it’s about the boy they brought in from the woods. The boy in 108.”

Qualen frowned. He glanced over at the transfer papers for Malcolm, riffled through them and saw that Dr Pastory’s name had been correctly entered making him the responsible party.

He said, “Did you tell him I am not concerned with patient’s affairs?”

“The gentleman was quite adamant about wanting to see the man in charge. He’s been here since I came in at eight o’clock.”

Damn. Qualen hated to start the day with some petty annoyance. “Does he have a name?”

“Yes, doctor. Mr Derak.”

It meant nothing to Dr Qualen. Had an unpleasant foreign sound. He sighed. Might as well get it over.

“Ask Mr Derak to come in.”

The doctor assumed a businesslike pose and watched as his visitor entered. He was not so young as he had appeared at first glance. It was difficult to guess his age. Something about the eyes, a deep shade of green, seemed very, very odd. Nevertheless, he was presentable enough. His sandy hair was cut short and neatly brushed. The jacket and slacks were not top quality, but good. He had a nice smile. Strong.

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