McBride, who managed to ward off the blow with his arm, snatching at the weapon in so doing.
The attack had taken him unawares but now, with the pain in his smashed nose to add fury to his
response, he was more than equal of the aggressor. He plucked the club from the man, sweets
from a babe, and leaped, roaring, to his feet. Any precepts he might once have been taught about
arrest techniques had fled from his mind. He lay a hail of blows on the man’s head and
shoulders, forcing him backward across the chamber. The man cowered beneath the assault and
eventually slumped, whimpering, against the wall. Only now, with his antagonist abused to the
verge of unconsciousness, did McBride’s furor falter. He stood in the middle of the chamber,
gasping for breath, and watched the beaten man slip down the wall. He had made a profound
error. The assailant, he now realized, was dressed in a white laboratory coat. He was, as Dooley
was irritatingly fond of saying, on the side of the angels.
“Damn,” said McBride, “shit, hell and damn.”
The man’s eyes flickered open, and he gazed up at McBride. His grasp on consciousness
was evidently tenuous, but a look of recognition crossed his wide-browed, somber face. Or
rather, recognition’s absence.
“You’re not him,” he murmured.
“Who?” said McBride, realizing he might yet salvage his reputation from this fiasco if he
could squeeze a clue from the witness. “Who did you think I was?”
The man opened his mouth, but no words emerged. Eager to hear the testimony,
McBride crouched beside him and said: “Who did you think you were attacking?”
Again the mouth opened; again no audible words emerged. McBride pressed his suit.
“It’s important,” he said, “just tell me who was here.”
The man strove to voice his reply. McBride pressed his ear to the trembling mouth.
“In a pig’s eye,” the man said, then passed out, leaving McBride to curse his father,
who’d bequeath him a temper he was afraid he would probably live to regret. But then, what
was living for?
Inspector Carnegie was used to boredom. For every rare moment of genuine discovery
his professional life had furnished him with, he had endured hour upon hour of waiting for
bodies to be photographed and examined, for lawyers to be bargained with and suspects
intimidated. He had long ago given up attempting to fight this tide of ennui and, after his
fashion, had learned the art of going with the flow. The processes of investigation could not be
hurried. The wise man, he had come to appreciate, let the pathologists, the lawyers and all their
tribes have their tardy way. All that mattered, in the fullness of time, was that the finger be
pointed and that the guilty quake.
Now, with the clock on the laboratory wall reading twelve fifty-three a.m., and even the
monkeys hushed in their cages, he sat at one of the benches and waited for Hendrix to finish his
calculations. The surgeon consulted his thermometer, then stripped off his gloves like a second
skin and threw then down onto the sheet on which the deceased lay. “It’s always difficult,” the
doctor said, “fixing time of death. She’s lost less than three degrees. I’d say she’s been dead
under two hours.”
“The officers arrived at a quarter to twelve,” Carnegie said, “so she died maybe half an
hour before that?”
“Something of that order.”
“Was she put in there?” he asked, indicating the place beneath the bench.