There was a forced-draft furnace and bellows in the corner. Margot had built a small coal fire there against the chill. On the fire was a pot of something that smelled like soup.
A complete set of farrier’s tools was on a workbench. She picked up a farrier’s hammer, this one with a short
handle and a heavy head. With her great arms and chest, Margot might have been a farrier herself, or a blacksmith with particularly pointed pectorals.
“You want to throw me the blankets?” Judy called down.
Margot picked up a bundle of freshly washed saddle blankets and with one scooping move of her great arm, sent it arching up to the loft.
“Okay, I’m gonna wash up and get the stuff out of the Jeep. We’ll eat in fifteen, okay?” Judy said, coming down the ladder.
Barney, feeling Margot’s scrutiny, did not check out Judy’s behind. There were some bales of hay with horse blankets folded on them for seats. Margot and Barney sat.
“You missed the ponies. They’re gone to the stable in Lester,” Margot said.
“I heard the trucks this morning. How come?”
“Mason’s business.” A little silence. They had always been easy with silence, but not this one. “Well, Barney. You get to a point where you can’t talk anymore, unless you’re going to do something. Is that where we are?”
“Like an affair or something,” Barney said. The unhappy analogy hung in the air.
“Affair
,” Margot said, “I’ve got something for you a hell of a lot better than that. You know what we’re talking about.”
“Pretty much,” Barney said.
“But if you decided you
didn’t
want to do something, and later it happened anyway, do you understand you could never come back on me about it?” She tapped her palm with the farrier’s hammer, absently perhaps, watching him with her blue butcher’s eyes.
Barney had seen some countenances in his time and
stayed alive by reading them. He saw she was telling the truth.
“I know that.”
“Same if we did something. I’ll be extremely generous one time, and one time only. But it would be enough. You want to know how much?”
“Margot, nothing’s gonna happen on my watch. Not while I’m taking his money to take care of him.”
“
Why
, Barney?”
Sitting on the bale, he shrugged his big shoulders. “Deal’s a deal.”
“You call that a
deal?
This is a
deal
,” Margot said.
“Five million dollars, Barney
. The same five Krendler’s supposed to get for selling out the FBI, if you want to know.”
“We’re talking about getting enough semen from Mason to get Judy pregnant.”
“We’re talking about something else too. You know if you take Mason’s
jism
from him and leave him alive, he’d get you, Barney. You couldn’t run far enough. You’d go to the fucking pigs.”
“I’d do what?”
“What is it, Barney,
Semper Fi
, like it says on your arm?”
“When I took his money I said I’d take care of him. While I work for him, I won’t do him any harm.”
“You don’t have
to … do
anything to him except the medical, after he’s dead. I can’t touch him there. Not one more time. You might have to help me with Cordell.”
“You kill Mason, you only get one batch,” Barney said.
“We get five cc’s, even a low-normal sperm count, put extenders in it, we could try five times with insemination, we could do it in vitro—Judy’s family’s real fertile.”
“Did you think about buying Cordell?”
“No. He’d never keep the deal. His word would be crap. Sooner or later he’d come back on me. He’d have to go.”
“You’ve thought about it a lot.”
“Yes. Barney, you have to control the nurse station. There’s tape backup on the monitors, there’s a record of every second. There’s live TV, but no videotape running. We—I put my hand down inside the shell of the respirator and immobilize his chest. Monitor shows the respirator still working. By the time his heart rate and blood pressure show a change, you rush in and he’s unconscious, you can try to revive him all you want. The only thing is, you don’t happen to notice me. I just press on his chest until he’s dead. You’ve worked enough autopsies, Barney. What do they look for when they suspect smothering?”
“Hemorrhages behind the eyelids.”
“Mason doesn’t have any eyelids.”
She had read up, and she was used to buying anything, anybody.
Barney looked her in the face but he fixed the hammer in his peripheral vision as he gave his answer: “No, Margot.”
“If I had let you fuck me would you do it?”
“No.”
“If I had fucked
you
would you do it?”
“No.”
“If you didn’t work here, if you didn’t have any medical responsibility to him would you do it?”
“Probably not.”
“Is it ethics or chickenshit?”
“I don’t know.”
“Let’s find out. You’re fired, Barney.”
He nodded, not particularly surprised.
“And, Barney?” She raised a finger to her lips. “Shhhh. Give me your word? Do I have to say I could kill you with that prior in California? I don’t need to say that do I?”
“You don’t have to worry,” Barney said.
“I’ve
got to worry. I don’t know how Mason lets people go. Maybe they just disappear.”
“You don’t have to worry either. I’ll tell Mason you’ve had hepatitis. You don’t know a lot about his business except that he’s trying to help the law—and he knows we got the prior on you, he’ll let you go.”
Barney wondered which Dr. Lecter had found more interesting in therapy, Mason Verger or his sister.
I
T WAS
night when the long silver transport pulled up to the barn at Muskrat Farm. They were late and tempers were short.
The arrangements at Baltimore-Washington International Airport had gone well at first, the on-board inspector from the Department of Agriculture rubber-stamped the shipment of sixteen swine. The inspector had an expert’s knowledge of swine and he had never seen anything like them.
Then Carlo Deogracias looked inside the truck. It was a livestock transporter and smelled like one, with traces in the cracks of many former occupants. Carlo would not let his pigs be unloaded. The airplane waited while the angry driver, Carlo, and Piero Falcione found another livestock truck more suitable to moving crates, located a truck wash with a steam hose, and steam-cleaned the cargo area.
Once at the main gate of Muskrat Farm, a last annoyance. The guard checked the tonnage of the truck and
refused them entrance, citing a load limit on an ornamental bridge. He redirected them to the service road through the national forest. Tree branches scraped the tall truck as it crept the last two miles.
Carlo liked the big clean barn at Muskrat Farm. He liked the little forklift that gently carried the cages into the pony stalls.
When the driver of the livestock truck brought an electric cattle prod to the cages and offered to zap a pig to see how deeply drugged it was, Carlo snatched the instrument away from him and frightened him so badly he was afraid to ask for it back.
Carlo would let the great rough swine recover from their sedation in the semidarkness, not letting them out of the cages until they were on their feet and alert. He was afraid that those awakening first might take a bite out of a drugged sleeper. Any prone figure attracted them when the herd was not napping together.
Piero and Tommaso had to be doubly careful since the herd ate the filmmaker, Oreste, and later his frozen assistant. The men could not be in the pen or the pasture with the pigs. The swine did not threaten, they did not gnash their teeth as wild pigs will, they simply kept watching the men with the terrible single-mindedness of a swine and sidled nearer until they were close enough to charge.
Carlo, equally single-minded, did not rest until he had walked by flashlight the fence enclosing Mason’s wooded pasture which adjoined the great national forest.
Carlo dug in the ground with his pocketknife and examined the forest mast under the pasture trees and found acorns. He had heard jays in the last light driving in and thought it likely there would be acorns. Sure enough, white oaks grew here in the enclosed field, but not too
many of them. He did not want the pigs to find their meals on the ground, as they could easily do in the great forest.
Mason had built across the open end of the barn a stout barrier with a Dutch gate in it, like Carlo’s own gate in Sardinia.
From behind the safety of this barrier, Carlo could feed them, sailing clothing stuffed with dead chickens, legs of lamb and vegetables, over the fence into their midst.
They were not tame, but they were not afraid of men or noise. Even Carlo could not go into the pen with them. A pig is not like other animals. There is a spark of intelligence and a terrible practicality in pigs. These were not at all hostile. They just liked to eat men. They were light of foot like a Miura bull and could cut like a sheepdog, and their movements around their keepers had the sinister quality of premeditation. Piero had a near moment retrieving a feeding a shirt that they thought they could use again.
There had never been such pigs before, bigger than the European wild boar and just as savage. Carlo felt he had created them. He knew that the thing they would do, the evil they would destroy, would be all the credit he would ever need in the hereafter.
By midnight, all were asleep in the barn: Carlo, Piero and Tommaso slept without dreaming in the tack room loft, the swine snored in their cages where their elegant little feet were beginning to trot in their dreams and one or two stirred on the clean canvas. The skull of the trotting horse, Fleet Shadow, faintly lit by the coal fire in the farrier’s furnace, watched over all.
T
O ATTACK
an agent of the Federal Bureau of Investigation with Mason’s false evidence was a big leap for Krendler. It left him a little breathless. If the Attorney General caught him, she would crush him like a roach.
Except for his own personal risk, the matter of ruining Clarice Starling did not weigh with Krendler as would breaking a man. A man had a family to support— Krendler supported his own family, as greedy and ungrateful as they were.
And Starling definitely had to go. Left alone, following the threads with the picky, petty homemaking skills of a woman, Clarice Starling would find Hannibal Lecter. If that happened, Mason Verger would not give Krendler anything.
The sooner she was stripped of her resources and put out there as bait, the better.
Krendler had broken careers before, in his own rise to power, first as a state prosecuting attorney active in politics, and later at Justice. He knew from experience that crippling
a woman’s career is easier than damaging a man’s. If a woman gets a promotion that women shouldn’t have, the most efficient way is to say she won it on her back.
It would be impossible to make that charge stick to Clarice Starling, Krendler thought. In fact, he couldn’t think of anyone more in
need
of a grudge-fucking up the dirt road. He sometimes thought of that abrasive act as he twisted his finger in his nose.
Krendler could not have explained his animosity to Starling. It was visceral and it belonged to a place in himself where he could not go. A place with seat covers and a dome light, door handles and window cranks and a girl with Starling’s coloring but not her sense and her pants around one ankle asking him what in the hell was the matter with him, and why didn’t he come on and do it, was he
some kind of queer? some kind of queer? some kind of queer?
If you didn’t know what a cunt Starling was, Krendler reflected, her performance in black and white was much better than her few promotions would indicate—he had to admit that. Her rewards had been satisfyingly few: By adding the odd drop of poison to her record over the years, Krendler had been able to influence the FBI career board enough to block a number of plum assignments she should have gotten, and her independent attitude and smart mouth had helped his cause.
Mason wouldn’t wait for the disposition of Feliciana Fish Market. And there was no guarantee any shit would stick to Starling in a hearing. The shooting of Evelda Drumgo and the others was the result of a security failure, obviously. It was a miracle Starling was able to save that little bastard of a baby. One more for the public to
have to feed. Tearing the scab off that ugly event would be easy, but it was an unwieldy way to get at Starling.
Better Mason’s way. It would be quick and she would be out of there. The timing was propitious:
One Washington axiom, proved more times than the Pythagorean theorem, states that in the presence of oxygen, one loud fart with an obvious culprit will cover many small emissions in the same room, provided they are nearly simultaneous.
Ergo, the impeachment trial was distracting the Justice Department enough for him to railroad Starling.
Mason wanted some press coverage for Dr. Lecter to see. But Krendler must make the coverage seem an unhappy accident. Fortunately an occasion was coming that would serve him well: the very birthday of the FBI.
Krendler maintained a tame conscience with which to shrive himself.
It consoled him now: If Starling lost her job, at worst some goddamned dyke den where Starling lived would have to do without the big TV dish for sports. At worst he was giving a loose cannon a way to roll over the side and threaten nobody anymore.
A “loose cannon” over the side would “stop rocking the boat,” he thought, pleased and comforted as though two naval metaphors made a logical equation. That the rocking boat moves the cannon bothered him not at all.
Krendler had the most active fantasy life his imagination would permit. Now, for his pleasure, he pictured Starling as old, tripping over those tits, those trim legs turned blue-veined and lumpy, trudging up and down the stairs carrying laundry, turning her face away from the stains on the sheets, working for her board at a bed-and-breakfast
owned by a couple of goddamned hairy old dykes.