The Silence of the Lambs (Hannibal Lecter 2)
“Okay. Sounded like she was in the other end of the house.”
“What did you tell her?”
“I said, ‘Yes, thank you very much,’ is what I said.”
“Good,” Mapp said. “That’s very good. Eat some crabs. Grab Pilcher and smooch him on his face, go wild.”
CHAPTER 61
Down the deep carpet in the corridor of the Marcus Hotel, a room-service waiter trundled a cart.
At the door of suite 91, he stopped and rapped softly on the door with his gloved knuckle. He cocked his head and rapped again to be heard above the music from within—Bach, Two- and Three-Part Inventions, Glenn Gould at the piano.
“Come.”
The gentleman with the bandage across his nose was in a dressing gown, writing at the desk.
“Put it by the windows. May I see the wine?”
The waiter brought it. The gentleman held it under the light of his desk lamp, touched the neck to his cheek.
“Open it, but leave it off the ice,” he said, and wrote a generous tip across the bottom of the bill. “I won’t taste it now.”
He did not want the waiter handing him wine to taste—he found the smell of the man’s watchband objectionable.
Dr. Lecter was in an excellent humor. His week had gone well. His appearance was coming right along, and as soon as a few small discolorations cleared, he could take off his bandages and pose for passport photos.
The actual work he was doing himself—minor injections of silicon in his nose. The silicon gel was not a prescription item, but the hypodermics and the Novocaine were. He got around this difficulty by pinching a prescription off the counter of a busy pharmacy near the hospital. He blanked out the chicken scratches of the legitimate physician with typist’s correction fluid and photocopied the blank prescription form. The first prescription he wrote was a copy of the one he stole, and he returned it to the pharmacy, so nothing was missing.
The palooka effect in his fine features was not pleasing, and he knew the silicon would move around if he wasn’t careful, but the job would do until he got to Rio.
When his hobbies began to absorb him—long before his first arrest—Dr. Lecter had made provisions for a time when he might be a fugitive. In the wall of a vacation cottage on the banks of the Susquehanna River were money and the credentials of another identity, including a passport and the cosmetic aids he’d worn in the passport photos. The passport would have expired by now, but it could be renewed very quickly.
Preferring to be herded through customs with a big tour badge on his chest, he’d already signed up for a ghastly sounding tour called “South American Splendor” that would take him as far as Rio.
He reminded himself to write a check on the late Lloyd Wyman for the hotel bill and get the extra five days’ lead while the check plodded through the bank, rather than sending an Amex charge into the computer.
This evening he was catching up on his correspondence, which he would have to send through a remailing service in London.
First, he sent to Barney a generous tip and a thank-you note for his many courtesies at the asylum.
Next, he dropped a note to Dr. Frederick Chilton in federal protective custody, suggesting that he would be paying Dr. Chilton a visit in the near future. After this visit, he wrote, it would make sense for the hospital to tattoo feeding instructions on Chilton’s forehead to save paperwork.
Last, he poured himself a glass of the excellent Batard-Montrachet and addressed Clarice Starling:
Well, Clarice, have the lambs stopped screaming?
You owe me a piece of information, you know, and that’s what I’d like.
An ad in the national edition of the Times and in the International Herald-Tribune on the first of any month will be fine. Better put it in the China Mail as well.
I won’t be surprised if the answer is yes and no. The lambs will stop for now. But, Clarice, you judge yourself with all the mercy of the dungeon scales at Threave; you’ll have to earn it again and again, the blessed silence. Because it’s the plight that drives you, seeing the plight, and the plight will not end, ever.
I have no plans to call on you, Clarice, the world being more interesting with you in it. Be sure you extend me the same courtesy.
Dr. Lecter touched his pen to his lips. He looked out at the night sky and smiled.
I have windows.