Which would mean, what? That Bryan had accomplices? That maybe he was working with other killers? Even if that was true, why would he murder those kids? Pookie spent at least fifty hours a week with Bryan. Before last night, Bryan clearly hadn’t know a thing about Oscar Woody or Jay Parlar or BoyCo. There was no motive.
Fuck. None of this made any sense.
Patrol officers were already in buildings on both sides of the street, knocking on apartment doors, looking for witnesses. Pookie didn’t have any hope of finding someone who had been up at three A.M. and had seen the deal go down.
There were no witnesses.
Wait … that wasn’t right — there was one person who had seen Jay Parlar up on that roof.
Bryan had. In his dreams.
Pookie walked to the ambulance. The paramedic was just finishing up, wiping down the cut on Bryan’s forehead. Bryan’s black clothes helped hide the fact that he’d bled like a stuck pig, even left a trail of droplets all the way from his apartment to here.
Pookie leaned in and looked at the sutured wound. “Hey, is that just three stitches?”
The paramedic nodded. “Yeah. Not too bad.”
“Three stitches for all that blood? Bryan, what are you, a hemophiliac?”
Bryan shrugged.
“I asked him the same thing,” the paramedic said. “Seemed like a lot of blood, but it appears to be clotting normally. No problems. Maybe it was from his sprinting here, I’m not sure. Scalp wounds always bleed like hell, though. He’s fine.”
“Thanks,” Pookie said. “Can you give us a minute?”
The paramedic nodded and walked off.
Pookie sat next to his partner in the back of the ambulance.
“Bri-Bri, you good?”
Bryan shook his head. “Far from it. Panos and Moses are next if they’re not dead already. You put out a call to have them picked up?”
Pookie nodded. “Ball-Puller Boyd already tried the Panos place, but Alex wasn’t home. Susie doesn’t know where he is.”
“Shocker,” Bryan said.
“I know, right? A patrol car is at Issac Moses’s place, but he’s also nowhere to be seen. I called a BOLO for both of them.”
Bryan nodded and seemed to relax. The call to Be On the Look-Out went out not only department-wide, but across the Bay Area. Someone would find those kids and bring them in.
Pookie took in a slow breath. He had to ask the hard question. Asking it somehow made all of this real, and he wished to God it wasn’t real, but he couldn’t beat around the bush any longer.
“Okay, Bryan, spill it — tell me what you saw.”
Bryan pointed out the ambulance’s open back doors toward the ruined white van. “I turned the corner, started running down Geary, and—”
“No, not that what you saw. In the dream. Tell me what you saw in the dream.”
Bryan looked down — not at Pookie, not at the floor, just down . When he spoke, it was in little more than a whisper. “I saw Parlar. He was walking. It was like I was looking down from above. Like I was tracking him … stalking him.”
“From above,” Pookie said. “Maybe, four stories above?”
Bryan looked at Pookie, then up to the apartment building’s roof. He nodded, understanding. “Yeah. Maybe four stories above. Only, it wasn’t me that saw him. It was and it wasn’t. I was on the roof, with this … other guy.”
“What did the other guy look like?”
Bryan paused. “I don’t remember.”
“Bri-Bri, you lie about as well as I do when I tell a woman I’ll call her in the morning. Start talking.”
Bryan reached up, his fingertips lightly touching the three tiny black stitches. “You’ll think I’m crazy.”
“Dude, I’m already positive you’re crazy. So tell me what the guy looked like.”
Bryan looked down again. “He had a blanket over his shoulders, his head. From what I could make out, he … he looked like a snake.”
“What, you mean shifty? Like those fucking Italians?”
He shook his head. “No, I mean like a snake . Green skin and a pointy nose.”
Pookie stared at Bryan. Bryan continued to stare at the ground.
“Green skin,” Pookie said. “Pointy nose.”
Bryan nodded.
Pookie didn’t want to laugh, but he couldn’t stop a small one from slipping out. “Man, I’d love to see the lineup if we catch this guy. Will number three step forward? No, not the werewolf, the snake-man.”
“It was just a dream, okay? It’s not like I saw a snake-man in real life.”
“Okay, okay,” Pookie said. Bryan was taking this hard. Who wouldn’t? But Pookie still had to treat him like any other witness — walk him through the situation, rephrase questions and ask again, and so on. “So what do you think is going on, Terminator? Did you know these boys?”
“No.”
“Before we found Oscar Woody, had you ever heard of the Boys Company?”
“No.”
“Then how did you know someone was trying to kill Jay Parlar?”
Bryan sighed. He probably wanted to believe all of this even less than Pookie did. “I already told you, Pooks. In my dream I was stalking him. I wanted to kill him, just like I wanted to kill Oscar in that first dream, although I didn’t know who Oscar Woody was at the time.”
Pookie closed his eyes and rubbed his face. He had to start making the smart decisions. Bryan hadn’t killed Jay Parlar, fine, but there was no longer any question that — somehow — he was involved in these murders. Partner or no partner, he belonged in interrogation, getting grilled like any other suspect in a murder case. But Pookie just couldn’t do that to his friend. There had to be another angle here.
“Bri-Bri, you said there were others with you in the Jay Parlar dream. You said the same thing about the Oscar Woody dream, right?”
Bryan nodded.
“So do you think you could describe them to a sketch artist?”
Bryan thought for a second, then shook his head. “No, I don’t think so. I can’t really visualize them, you know? It was just a hodgepodge of messed-up features.”
A young uniformed officer approached. Pookie slid out of the ambulance to meet him. “Officer Stuart Hood, good to see you. Your mom win that cook-off last month?”
“Took second,” Hood said. “I’ll tell her you asked.”
“Aw, she got robbed. You tell Rebecca she should have won the blue ribbon. And tell her to make me some more of those hazelnut cookies you brought in. Like little slices of heaven, those things.”
Hood smiled. “I’ll tell her. Turns out we have a woman who saw something suspicious, Inspector. Tiffany Hine, sixty-seven years old.”
“A witness at three A.M. in this part of town? Nice work, Officer Hood. I’m surprised you didn’t find a ring-tailed lemur first.”
Hood smiled, laughed a little. “I wouldn’t get too excited, Inspector.”
“Oh, you think this is a funny situation?” Pookie said. “This is high comedy to you?”
“If I’m sad and melancholy, is he going to suddenly spring back to life?”
“ Melancholy? That’s a big word for you, isn’t it? Just tell me what Hine said.”
Hood bit his lip, trying to hide a smile. “She said she saw a werewolf take the boy.”
The last thing Pookie needed right now was a standup comic moonlighting as a cop. “Officer Hood, I’m really not in the mood for jokes, you get me?”
Hood shrugged. “I’m not joking. That’s what she said.”
“She said, a werewolf ?”
“Well, she said the guy had a dog-face, anyway. That sounds like a werewolf to me. But Wolfie wasn’t alone, he had … a partner.” Hood’s chest jiggled from a suppressed laugh. “She said … she said it was a guy with … with … a snake-face .”
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