I stepped forward and laid the crowbar gently on his desk, on top of the paper and the glass slides. Unhooked my boot lace and picked the knot out of it. Squatted down and threaded it back through all the eyelets. Tightened it up and tied it off. I looked up in time to see the doctor move a microscope slide. He picked it up and scraped it against the end of the crowbar where it was matted with blood and hair.
“Damn,” he said. “I got this slide all dirty. Very careless of me.”
He made the exact same error with five more slides.
“Are we interested in fingerprints?” he said.
I shook my head. “We’re assuming gloves.”
“We should check, I think. Contributory negligence is a serious matter.”
He opened another drawer and peeled a latex glove out of a box and snapped it on his hand. It made a tiny cloud of talcum dust. Then he picked the crowbar up and carried it out of the room.
He came back less than ten minutes later. He still had his glove on. The crowbar was washed clean. The black paint gleamed. It looked indistinguishable from new.
“No prints,” he said.
He put the crowbar down on his chair and pulled a file drawer and came out with a plain brown cardboard box. Opened it up and took out two chalk-white plaster casts. Both were about six inches long and both had
The doctor put the positive on the chair next to the crowbar. Lined them up, parallel. The cast was about six inches long. It was white and a little pitted from the molding process but was otherwise identical to the smooth black iron. Absolutely identical. Same section, same thickness, same contours.
Then the doctor put the negative on the desk. It was a little bigger than the positive, and a little messier. It was an exact replica of the back of Carbone’s shattered skull. The doctor picked up the crowbar. Hefted it in his hand. Lined it up, speculatively. Brought it down, very slowly,
“I’ll check the blood and the hair,” the doctor said. “Not that we don’t already know what the results will be.”
He lifted the crowbar out of the plaster and tried it again. It went in again, precisely, and deep. He lifted it out and balanced it across his open palms, like he was weighing it. Then he grasped it by the straighter end and swung it, like a batter going after a high fastball. He swung it again, harder, a compact, violent stroke. It looked big in his hands. Big, and a little heavy for him. A little out of control.
“Very strong man,” he said. “Vicious swing. Big tall guy, right-handed, physically very fit. But that describes a lot of people on this post, I guess.”
“There was no guy,” I said. “Carbone fell and hit his head.”
The doctor smiled briefly and balanced the bar across his palms again.
“It’s handsome, in its way,” he said. “Does that sound strange?”
I knew what he meant. It was a nice piece of steel, and it was everything it needed to be and nothing it didn’t. Like a Colt Detective Special, or a K-bar, or a cockroach. He slid it inside a long steel drawer. The metals scraped one on the other and then boomed faintly when he let it go and dropped it the final inch.
“I’ll keep it here,” he said. “If you like. Safer that way.”
“OK,” I said.
He closed the drawer.
“Are you right-handed?” he asked me.
“Yes,” I said. “I am.”
“Colonel Willard told me you did it,” he said. “But I didn’t believe him.”
“Why not?”
“You were very surprised when you saw who it was. When I put his face back on. You had a definite physical reaction. People can’t fake that sort of thing.”
“Did you tell Willard that?”
The doctor nodded. “He found it inconvenient. But it didn’t really deflect him. And I’m sure he’s already developed a theory to explain it away.”
“I’ll watch my back,” I said.
“Some Delta sergeants came to see me too. There are rumors starting. I think you should watch your back very carefully.”
“I plan to,” I said.
“
Summer and I got back in the Humvee. She fired it up and put it in gear and sat with her foot on the brake.
“Quartermaster,” I said.
“It wasn’t military issue,” she said.
“It looked expensive,” I said. “Expensive enough for the Pentagon, maybe.”
“It would have been green.”
I nodded. “Probably. But we should still check. Sooner or later we’re going to need all our ducks in a row.”