feet.
âWhy is that?â
âI think you should thank me for arguing against the castration of idiots.â He tipped his hat at them. âI have all I need, thank you, gentlemen.â
He passed by Grace, and she turned to walk beside him as they left the policemen in their wake, jaws working awkwardly as if they belonged in the barn beside the fictional, mutilated dairy cow. A smile lurked on Graceâs lips, which she barely managed to contain until comfortably seated inside the carriage.
âI rather enjoyed that,â she admitted to him as their driver touched the reins to the horses and the hoofbeats carried them into the night, thunder rolling to catch up to them.
âIâm a bit surprised to hear it,â Thornhollow said, his face lostin the darkness. âIâd no doubt that you could look upon the horrific without flinching, but to actually enjoy it makes me wonder if perhaps I should truly shield poor ignorant men such as those weâre leaving behind us from you in the future.â
âIâd not hurt them,â Grace said. âBut men are always soââ she broke off, correcting herself. âMost men are always so proper in the presence of a lady. To hear men speak to other men as they would if I werenât there was enlightening.â
âAnd not to my genderâs credit, Iâm sure,â Thornhollow said. âHowever, what you say is true and part of the reason why I agreed to take you with me from Boston in the first place. Your mind is quick, your attention to detail established, your memory infallible. But the bandages on your foreheadâand the scars that will formâprovide the perfect cover for all your assets. Itâs established; youâre insane.â
âAnd therefore I am not human,â Grace finished for him.
âPrecisely. Most people will assume you lack reason. Theyâre bound to say anything in front of you. Words that might pass when Iâm out of earshot will be trapped by your meticulous mind. Within the bounds of the asylum youâre free to be more expressive, establish some relationships however you can without using your voice. But among the public youâre my fly on the wall, a carrier of all the information I canât possibly collect alone.â
âAnd all my information, Doctor? All the things I glean while Istand in the rain pretending to be dull and staring at a corpse, what shall we do with them?â
âDear girl, Iâm a doctor,â Thornhollow said as they crested the hill to the asylum. âWhat else will we do with them but dissect them?â
FOURTEEN
T hornhollow said a good dissection must be done while the subject is still fresh. He brought a steaming pot into his office, the warm scent of coffee following while Grace chafed her hands together for warmth.
âIâd apologize for dragging you out on a night such as this,â the doctor said, âbut this particular crime being as straightforward as it is affords the perfect opportunity for you to cut your teeth.â
Grace accepted a steaming mug and settled onto a leather chair. âStraightforward?â
âYes, quite, as Iâll explain,â Thornhollow said as he rolled a chalkboard to the front of the office, knocking askew a few piles of books as he did. âIâd apologize for the mess as well, but itâs not likely Iâll ever clean the place.â
Grace looked around his office, which was rather a mess. Piles of books fought a tottering battle against gravity, unaided by their own weight whenever his relentless wanderings shook the warped floorboards. His coat was flung across the desk, and heâd set the coffeepot on top of it.
âNow to work, young Grace, before sleep claims you again.â
She shook her head to clear it, already lulled by the warmth of the fire. The loose end of her bandage had unwound itself and flapped against her cheek. She tucked it
Dean Koontz
Lori L. Clark
Robert Dugoni
Natasha Cooper
Ian Todd
Kerry Wilkinson
Piero Chiara
Rita Herron
Gary F. Vanucci
Gail Gaymer Martin