focus. But inside I could see objects scattered about the floor, an overturned table, a chair on its side.
The door was unlocked, and Miss Chorley lay breathing, but shallowly, against a back wall, where the baseboard showed remnants of at least three colors and the hash marks of being repeatedly chewed by a dog or other small animal. She'd caught the flocked wallpaper with her fingernails as she went down, ripping a long thin swatch that now curled around her arm like ribbon on a gift.
Her eyes opened when I knelt to take her pulse and speak to her. She wasn't really there, but she was stable. No wounds, as far as I could tell, other than a few bruises, and no blood. I found the phone, dialed the operator, and had her route me to the locals. Explaining what had happened, I asked for an ambulance and a squad. Then I asked for Sergeant Haskell.
He was on duty, I was told, but out on a call. They'd radio and send him right over.
I spent the wait checking the scene and checking back on her in equal parts.
They had come in through the back door, which looked to have been locked since about the time Roosevelt took office, but whose frame was so rotten that a child could have pushed the door in with one finger. Whether they had just started tearing the place up, then been interrupted by her, or whether they'd gone about it as she lay there, was impossible to say, but they'd done a thorough job. Walls had been kicked in, upholstered furniture sliced open, floorboards pried loose. If I read the signs right, they'd started here and, growing progressively frustrated at not finding what they were looking for, moved into the other of the two habitable rooms, which served as her bedroom, then about the house at random. The damage got less focused, more savage, as it went on.
Haskell was there inside of thirty minutes, trailing the ambulance by ten, a small, compact, muscular man dressed in trim-looking khakis and seersucker sport coat and so soft-spoken that listeners instinctively leaned toward him. I told him about Billy and we walked the scene together as the ambulance personnel packed up equipment, paperwork, and Miss Chorley.
"Yeah," Haskell said at the back door. "That's pretty much it. Then they went out the way they came in."
"There have to be tire tracks back there." If not the brunt of the storm, Hazelwood had got its fair share of rain.
Haskell nodded. "We'll get impressions. Most likely this was kids. And most likely the tracks—"
"Will match half the vehicles in the county."
"Not our first rodeo, is it?" He went through to the porch to light a cigarette. Much of the floor had rotted through out here; each step was an act of faith. From beneath, three newborn kittens looked up at the huge bodies crossing their sky. "Woman lives here all these years, no bother to anyone, you'd think she could at least be left alone. Sort of thing seems to be happening more and more."
He shook his head.
"And it's just starting. Towns like ours get closer to the bone, less and less money around, jobs hard to come by—no way it's going to stop."
We stood there as the ambulance pulled out. I looked down at the kittens, hoping their mother was not the cat I had seen dead and swollen doublesize beside the road on my way in.
"You figure they were looking for money?" Haskell said.
"Looking, anyway."
He stepped off the porch to grind his cigarette out on bare ground. "Kids . . ."
"Maybe not."
I don't know why I said that. There was no reason to believe it was anything other. Just a feeling that came over me. Maybe I had some sense—with Billy's being up that way and coming back to town after so long, with his accident, with my finding the old lady like this—that we had ducks lining up, or as my grandfather would have said, one too many hogs at the trough.
Or maybe it was only that I wanted so badly for the things that happen to us to have meaning.
CHAPTER TWELVE
MOST OF THE TOWN, what was left of the town, came to Billy's
Mara Black
Jim Lehrer
Mary Ann Artrip
John Dechancie
E. Van Lowe
Jane Glatt
Mac Flynn
Carlton Mellick III
Dorothy L. Sayers
Jeff Lindsay