The rug was thick and heavy and as she tugged at it, dust swarmed in the beam of her flashlight. She sneezed twice. Standing on tiptoe, she could fold the rug over to the midline of the tall old car. The curtains were drawn in the back windows. The door handle was covered with dust. She had to lean forward over cartons to reach it. Touching only the end of the handle, she tried to turn it downward. Locked. There was no keyhole in the rear door. She’d have to move a lot of boxes to get to the front door, and there was damn little place to put them. She could see a small gap between the curtain and the post of the rear window.
Starling leaned over boxes to put her eye close to the glass and shined her light through the crack. She could only see her reflection until she cupped her hand on top of the light. A splinter of the beam, diffused by the dusty glass, moved across the seat. An album lay open on the seat. The colors were poor in the bad light, but she could see Valentines pasted on the pages. Lacy old Valentines, fluffy on the page.
“Thanks a lot, Dr. Lecter.” When she spoke, her breath stirred the fuzz of dust on the windowsill and fogged the glass. She didn’t want to wipe it, so she had to wait for it to clear. The light moved on, over a lap rug crumpled on the floor of the car and onto the dusty wink of a pair of man’s patent leather evening shoes. Above the shoes, black socks and above the socks were tuxedo trousers with legs in them.
Nobody’sbeeninthatdoorinfiveyears—easy, easy, hold it baby.
“Oh, Mr. Yow. Say, Mr. Yow?”
“Yes, Officer Starling?”
“Mr. Yow, looks like somebody’s sitting in this car.”
“Oh my. Maybe you better come out, Miss Starling.”
“Not quite yet, Mr. Yow. Just wait there, if you will, please.”
Now is when it’s important to think. Now is more important than all the crap you tell your pillow for the rest of your life. Suck it up and do this right. I don’t want to destroy evidence. I do want some help. But most of all I don’t want to cry wolf. If I scramble the Baltimore office and the cops out here for nothing, I’ve had it. I see what looks like some legs. Mr. Yow would not have brought me here if he’d known there was a cool one in the car. She managed to smile at herself. “Cool one” was bravado. Nobody’s been here since Yow’s last visit. All right, that means the boxes were put here after whatever’s in the car. And that means I can move the boxes without losing anything important.
“All right, Mr. Yow.”
“Yes. Do we have to call the police, or are you sufficient, Officer Starling?”
“I’ve got to find that out. Just wait right there, please.”
The box problem was as maddening as Rubik’s Cube. She tried to work with the flashlight under her arm, dropped it twice, and finally put it on top of the car. She had to put boxes behind her, and some of the shorter book cartons would slide under the car. Some kind of bite or splinter made the ball of her thumb itch.
Now she could see through the dusty glass of the front passenger’s side window into the chauffeur’s compartment. A spider had spun between the big steering wheel and the gearshift. The partition between the front and back compartments was closed.
She wished she had thought to oil the Packard key before she came under the door, but when she stuck it in the lock, it worked.
There was hardly room to open the door more than a third of the way in the narrow passage. It swung against the boxes with a thump that sent the mice scratching and brought additional notes from the piano. A stale smell of decay and chemical came out of the car. It jogged her memory in a place she couldn’t name.
She leaned inside, opened the partition behind the chauffeur’s seat, and shined her flashlight into the rear compartment of the car. A formal shirt with studs was the bright thing the light found first, quickly up the shirtfront to the face, no face to see, and down again, over glittering shirt studs and satin lapels to a lap with zipper open, and up again to the neat bow tie and the collar, where the white stub neck of a mannequin protruded. But above the neck, something else that reflected little light. Cloth, a black hood where the head should be, big, as though it covered a parrot’s cage. Velvet, Starling thought. It sat on a plywood shelf extending over the neck of the mannequin from the parcel shelf behind.
She took several pictures from the front seat, focusing with the flashlight and closing her eyes against the flash of the strobe. Then she straightened up outside the car. Standing in the dark, wet, with cobwebs on her, she considered what to do.
What she was not going to do was summon the special agent in charge of the Baltimore field office to look at a mannequin with its fly open and a book of Valentines.
Once she decided to get in the backseat and take the hood off the thing, she didn’t want to think about it very long. She reached through the chauffeur’s partition, unlocked the rear door, and rearranged some boxes to get it open. It all seemed to take a long time. Th
e smell from the rear compartment was much stronger when she opened the door. She reached in and, carefully lifting the Valentine album by the corners, moved it onto an evidence bag on top of the car. She spread another evidence bag on the seat.
The car springs groaned as she got inside and the figure shifted a little when she sat down beside it. The right hand in its white glove slid off the thigh and lay on the seat. She touched the glove with her finger. The hand inside was hard. Gingerly she pushed the glove down from the wrist. The wrist was some white synthetic material. There was a lump in the trousers that for a silly instant reminded her of certain events in high school.
Small scrambling noises came from under the seat.
Gentle as a caress, her hand touching the hood. The cloth moved easily over something hard and slick beneath. When she felt the round knob on the top, she knew. She knew that it was a big laboratory specimen jar and she knew what would be in it. With dread, but little doubt, she pulled off the cover.
The head inside the jar had been severed neatly close beneath the jaw. It faced her, the eyes long burned milky by the alcohol that preserved it. The mouth was open and the tongue protruded slightly, very gray. Over the years, the alcohol had evaporated to the point that the head rested on the bottom of the jar, its crown protruding through the surface of the fluid in a cap of decay. Turned at an owlish angle to the body beneath, it gaped stupidly at Starling. Even in the play of light over the features, it remained dumb and dead.
Starling, in this moment, examined herself. She was pleased. She was exhilarated. She wondered for a second if those were worthy feelings. Now, at this moment, sitting in this old car with a head and some mice, she could think clearly, and she was proud of that.
“Well, Toto,” she said, “we’re not in Kansas anymore.” She’d always wanted to say that under stress, but doing it left her feeling phony, and she was glad nobody had heard. Work to do.
She sat back gingerly and looked around.
This was somebody’s environment, chosen and created, a thousand light-years across the mind from the traffic crawling down Route 301.