“No. These things have a heel and smooth soles. Keep your eyes peeled. Something’s not right.”
The cold rain soaked through the shoulders and back of Walt’s uniform. He wiped his face on his sleeve in order to see.
“Fucking cats and dogs,” Brandon said over the radio. The rain had greatly intensified.
Walt was running now, looking left and right, up the hill and down, the narrow trail meandering just below him.
“I got a million running shoes and hiking boots, Sheriff,” Brandon reported. “But I got nothing like what you’re talking about. No office shoes.”
“Keep your eyes peeled off-trail,” Walt ordered.
“Roger, that.”
Walt felt a tension in his chest-a knowing fear. He relived watching the shoe impressions melt behind the destructive power of the rain. Though but a few miles from downtown, a half mile from the highway, these woods were national forest and subject to the laws of nature, not man. Bears were commonly spotted. Cougar. Elk. Any number of which could scare a runner off a trail, pursue the intruder for dinner or out of defense of a calf or cub. The combination of the discovery of the unexpected shoe prints and the now torrential, cold rain drove home an anxiety that peaked with Brandon ’s next radio transmission.
“Sheriff? What’s your twenty? I think I’ve got something.”
A moment later Walt flinched with the sound of a dull gunshot just ahead on the trail: a flare.
Brandon had found her.
Ten
A woman’s body, bloody and splayed in a tangle of limbs. The top of her running suit was ripped, baring her chest. Her neck was canted inhumanly to one side.
Walt placed a space blanket over her to keep off the rain. Ailia Holms had been mauled. “Bear?” Brandon asked.
“I’m no expert, but I’m guessing cat. Bite marks on the neck, the narrowness of the claws.”
Walt ordered the Hill Trail cordoned off. He and Brandon established a perimeter around the body using dead sticks. With Brandon lifting and replacing the space blanket, Fiona, who had trudged up through the woods, shot dozens of photographs before anyone disturbed the scene. Others arrived through the forest: deputies, a pair of paramedics, and a local doctor, Royal McClure. At Walt’s request, he would serve as medical examiner, an assignment certain to piss off the county coroner, but Walt was intent on doing this the right way. Electing a mortician as coroner did not make him a medical examiner.
McClure, a wiry man in his mid-fifties, had tight, green eyes and a high raspy voice. “I’ll be able to tell you more later. Much more. But for now you’ve got a body dead twelve to eighteen hours. Trauma, blood loss. All the appearance of an animal attack.”
Walt asked, “What are the odds that two cougars attack humans within a day of each other?”
“Who said anything about two?” McClure asked. “These cats cover a lot of ground.”
“We darted one and locked it up yesterday. Down at the Humane Society, the pound,” Walt said. “She sure as hell didn’t do this. I’ve lived here, off and on, for most of my life, and I can only remember one other cat attack before this-and that one was provoked. Now we lose a yellow Lab. Danny Cutter gets run out of the Big Wood by a cat. We dart one, and that same night, another kills a woman out running. Are you kidding me?”
In the midst of removing the space blanket for Fiona, Brandon suddenly pulled the Mylar sheet aside and let it fall to the ground, like a magician who’d given up on his trick.
“Keep her covered, Tommy,” Walt said, turning from McClure.
“Check it out, Sheriff,” Brandon said, kneeling close to the body. “What the fuck is that?” The rain continued to fall in sheets as it had for the past half hour. Brandon dragged the space blanket back over her once again, covering her head and face, to below her waist, leaving only her lacerated legs exposed.
Walt stepped closer, seeing for the first time what Brandon now pointed to: a small circle of white.
“Paint?” Walt guessed.
“It’s dissolving, whatever it is,” Brandon said. “Dissolving fast. And look there, and there.” He pointed. Then he lifted the Mylar and studied her more closely. “It’s all over her.”
Fiona, of her own volition, scrolled through digital shots while carefully screening her camera from the rain. “I made pictures of those,” she said. “I count seven…no…eight on her chest and torso. Another four on her head and hair.”
“It’s feces,” McClure said, having touched it with his gloved finger and lifted it to his nose. “Bird feces.”
“Birdshit?” Brandon asked. “How’s that possible? Look around her. Nothing.”
None of the leaves, sticks, or plants surrounding the body showed any sign of the white splotches.
“Doc?” Walt asked.
“It’s not my place to comment on physical evidence.”
Walt looked up into the rain. No coverage here, the tree branches not touching. So where had the birds perched?
“You know that blood-splatter course?” Brandon said. “If birdshit’s anything like blood, then the size of these, and the tightness of the rings, means it didn’t fall very far. A bird takes a crap from up there, it’s going to hit like a bomb.”
“Expert testimony if I’ve ever heard it,” Walt cracked.
“Not to mention she rolled all the way down the hill,” Brandon said, ignoring Walt’s jab. “So it’s got to be fresh, right?”
“He’s right,” McClure interjected. “Or she was out running with dried bird feces all over her.”
Walt was still bothered by the smooth-soled shoe prints he’d followed earlier. In the excitement of the discovery, he’d neglected to send anyone to protect his oilskin and the tracks it covered. He did so now by radio, but feared a complete loss.
“And there’s a question of blood,” McClure pointed out.
Fiona, Brandon, and Walt all turned inquisitively toward him. Their faces ran with rainwater. “Blood?” Walt asked.
“I count a hundred and fifty-six lacerations, and we haven’t rolled her yet,” McClure said. “So where’s all the blood?”
Eleven
O n his second visit in a matter of hours, something about the indulgence of the Holms estate left Walt with a sickening feeling in his gut. It was far too big for two people; how would it feel now with only one?
He was informed by a staff member that Stuart Holms had already left for the conference. This kind of thing needed to be done in person. Walt drove over to Sun Valley. It took him twenty minutes of moving between various talks and coffee clutches, meeting rooms and hospitality suites to find Holms on the porch of the Guest House in a private conversation with the head of Disney. Walt asked to speak to Holms in confidence and took the vacated chair.
“There’s never an easy way to say this. I’m sorry to have to tell you that we found your wife out Adam’s Gulch. She was pronounced dead at the scene, apparent victim of an animal attack.”
The other man’s clear blue eyes ticked back and forth, alternately searching the air above Walt’s head. His brow knotted, and he nodded slightly, and sighed. Then his eyes fell to the plastic tabletop, and he dragged his trembling hands into his lap. “I’ve known since last night. I knew in here.” He touched his chest. “She’s never not come home before. Oh, God. An animal attack?”
“A cougar possibly. Yes.”
“Was it her period?” Stuart Holms asked. “I don’t even know, I’m sorry to say. That’s when they attack women, right?”
“A thorough examination is being conducted,” Walt said.
Holms kept his head down. He mumbled, “A cat? She liked cats. Loved cats. Volunteered at the pound. Did you know that?”
“At some point I’m going to take a full statement from you, sir. No hurry, but the sooner we can get to that the better.”
Holms lifted his head, revealing teary, bloodshot eyes. “Of course,” he said.