âPavlik, it was eating another member of our species, and you're going to risk letting its offspring grow up to slither in Mommy's footsteps? Not to mention following her dietary habits?'
The whole thing was starting to feel surreal. Whatever were we doing stuck
here
, talking about
this
, while standing next to â¦
that
? I averted my eyes.
âI get it, Maggy. And if the creature hadn't ruptured, I would have happily slit the thing's throat if I could find it. As it is, though, I'm not sure I feel right about smashing the eggs. We'll let the authorities decide on that when they arrive.'
âUnless the eggs hatch first, overrun the cars and
Murder on the Orient Espresso
gets made into a sequel to
Snakes on a Plane
,' I muttered. âThen all the “authorities” will find of us is our shoes. Maybe.'
âGood flick,' Pavlik observed as the rain started to fall heavier again. âA classic, in fact. But I have to say, if these eggs can hatch themselves, make their way up and into the train and then kill us all, we deserve what we get.'
Terrific. Now Pavlik was Charles Darwin.
On the opposite side of the breach, the engineer came around the locomotive's corner. âI tapped the first two I saw. Will they do?' He hooked a finger toward Boyce, the coffeehouse owner, and Markus, the librarian.
âJesus,' Markus said. He was looking at the flooded track. âWhat do we do?'
âI didn't tell them nothing,' Hertel said to Pavlik. âLike you said.'
Pavlik nodded. âSadly, the track's not our biggest problem.' He gestured toward Potter's body in the shadow of the locomotive.
Boyce stepped forward. âIsn't this one of our passengers?'
I realized the coffee man wouldn't necessarily know Laurence Potter by face.
âHow in the hell did Potter get out here?' Markus asked, not seeming to know what to make of it all.
He could join the club.
âApparently he fell off the train and,' Pavlik waved toward the python in front of us, âwas attacked by a snake.'
It was true as far as it went, but it didn't fool Boyce, who had begun to circle the body. âA snake carrying a knife?'
Pavlik's eyes narrowed, as if he was appraising Boyce. âTime on the job?'
âMilitary police, two hitches, one tour in Iraq.'
I didn't quite see why it took a specialized background to notice a knife in a man's back, but I'd grown accustomed to the fact that people who've served in the military or law enforcement seem able to recognize each other. Pavlik had explained it to me as an awareness, displayed by a way of carrying oneself and cold calmness in being ready for anything.
My opinion? This was a
big
anything.
âThat's a python â African rock, I think,' Markus said, coming to join us on the opposite bank. âDid he explode?'
âShe,' Hertel corrected. âBut “explode” is a fair description. Full of eggs, I might add.'
Since Markus seemed to know something about pythons, I was hoping he was willing to share the facts, sans Engineer Hertel's colorful embroidery. âCan those eggs hatch?'
âYou mean right this second?' Markus pursed his lips, squatting down to get a better view of the snake. âThe female would need to lay them first and then coil her own body into a nest to keep them warm.'
âDoesn't look like that'll happen,' Boyce said.
âA good thing, too,' Hertel said. âYou don't want to be around a Mama Python protecting her eggs, 'specially if you and me are right and this is one of those African rock jobbies.'
âBigger and meaner,' Markus concurred. âDo you think Potter was protecting himself with the knife and somehow got it in the back during the struggle?'
For a second I thought Pavlik might go along with the theory for expediency, but then he seemed to reconsider. âPretty unlikely, I'd say. Heâ'
âWhat in the world are you all doing out here?' Zoe Scarlett had rounded the locomotive and come up behind the engineer and Boyce. She stopped short and Missy, following on her boss's heels, nearly rear-ended her.
Then both of them looked down at Laurence Potter.
âOh, dear,' Missy Hudson, the mistress of understatement said. âIs he â¦?'
âDead,' Hertel said, flatly. âStabbed and squeezed, then swallered and
ree
-gurgi-
tated
for good measure.'
Missy turned green, but it was Zoe who fainted dead away.
I
registered a benefit of the train having already reversed on the tracks so it now pointed east and back toward the station in Fort Lauderdale: the sleeping car, where Pavlik wanted to stash Larry Potter's body, was the closest one to us.
Leaving Missy, Markus and the recovering Zoe to continue on to the club car entrance at the rear of the train, Pavlik and Boyce had carried Potter's body to the exit where I'd found the matchbook. They stood waiting while I slid open the door.
âYou may just have to count to three and sling 'im up there,' Hertel said from behind them. âThis train doesn't have no steps to pull down, because the station's got high platforms and that's the only place people will get on and off.'
We all looked down at Potter. Pavlik had hold of the reviewer under his arms and Boyce had hold of the feet. I couldn't see how they were going to “sling” him â one-two-three, heave! â and have him land inside the train as opposed to splattered up against it.
âFireman's carry is the best,' Boyce said, setting down his end. âI'll get him.'
âYou sure?' Pavlik asked. âWe canâ'
âYup.' Boyce leaned over, wrapped his arms around Potter's waist and levered him up onto his shoulder. âGotta keep in shape.'
Straightening up, the coffee man swung himself and his burden up and into the train, seemingly effortlessly.
âYour tongue is hanging out,' Pavlik growled to me. âPut it back where it belongs and climb in.'
âYessir,' I said, swinging myself up ahead of him. Zoe's swoon at the sight of Potter's body, while understandable, had made me feel absolutely plucky by comparison.
âDon't you want a ⦠pristine room?' I asked, as Pavlik slid past me to open the first door on the left for Boyce, who was waiting patiently. âThis is where you â and Potter, if my theory is right â were earlier.'
âWhich makes it the perfect place now,' Pavlik said. âAny evidence was already trampled over during our little play and this way we don't chance contaminating another possible scene.'
âMurder scene?' I asked, as Boyce went to deposit his load.
âHe was stabbed somewhere,' Pavlik pointed out. âThere mustâ'
âOops,' Boyce said as Potter slipped off his shoulder and onto the bunk. âHe's kind of slippery.'
âProbably python tummy juices,' Hertel said from the doorway. âNot to mention the rain. It's coming down cats and dogs again out there.'
As if the Everglades themselves were writing our stage directions, lightning flashed through the window, illuminating the body.
âLet's keep him up on his side,' Pavlik said, assisting. âWe don't want to jam the knife any deeper into his back.'
âNot going to matter much now,' Hertel opined, clicking on the roomette light.
We ignored him as the two other men settled Potter onto the bunk, facing away from us toward the window.
I suppressed a shiver. Given my new-found âpluck,' I attributed the reaction to the fact that my sundress was rain-damp. With the window closed and air conditioning on, the sleeping space felt like an icebox. And it smelled none too sweet, as well. âWhat do we do now?'
âI asked Markus, Missy, and Zoe to keep this to themselves, but have everyone convene in the passenger car.' Pavlik hooked a finger in the direction of the next car. âWe'll need to explain the situation and outline our options, assuming there are any.'
Then, to Hertel, âI assume, since the track is underwater, we're stuck here?'
âYou're plumb right about that. We can plow through a little water, but it looks to me like the railroad bed might've washed away under the tracks and sunk 'em, which is why we have that gulley between us and where the snake had ahold of him.' He nodded at Potter.
I looked at the dead man, who could easily have been curled up in bed âwith his trousers on,' as the old nursery rhyme goes.
One shoe off and one shoe on. Diddle, diddle, dumpling, my son John.
âShould we cover him or something?'
âI'd rather not,' said Pavlik. âThe less we tinker, the happier the crime-scene people are going to be when they get here. In fact, we should clear this car and post a guard to keep everyone out.'
He looked at Boyce. âWill you take first watch?'
The coffee man née military policeman nodded.
I was relieved Pavlik had found a comrade-in-arms in Boyce, especially since his next choice probably would have been me. Much as I appreciated the trust, being left alone guarding a dead body â especially one that had been headfirst in the digestive tract of a very pregnant nightmare â was beyond creepy, even bordering on sci-fi.
Besides, I told myself, much better that I be present when the sheriff briefed the rest of the passengers. That way I'd know what he had and hadn't told them and, therefore, what I was free to say. That was the kind of judgment â or lack of judgment â call that had gotten me into trouble before.
Moving to the warmer corridor, Pavlik waited for the rest of us to follow him out before sliding the door closed behind us. Then he and Boyce went room to room â one opening the door, the other entering, then alternating for the next one just like you would see in the movies.
Satisfied no one was in the sleeping car besides us, Boyce asked, âDo you want me posted here in the hall?'
âLet's go through to the next car,' Pavlik said, leading the way into the vestibule.
âWait a second,' I said, backtracking. âI don't think we closed this exit door completely when we brought the body in. That's probably why it's so toasty warm in the hallway.'
âStop!' Pavlik barked, but I'd already grabbed the handle and went to slide the door closed.
My hand came away, sticky.
T
he rumble of voices could be heard as Pavlik slid open the door of the passenger car.
âIt must be blood,' I whispered to Pavlik as I slipped past him into the restroom to wash my hands. âThat's also the area where I found Potter's matches.'
âTime and forensics will tell us just what the substance is,' the sheriff said, maddeningly reasurred. âAs for the matches, are you sure they're his?'
âYes.' I dried my hands on a paper towel before plunging one of them into the pockets of my sundress to retrieve the empty matchbook. I held it up. âSee? These were the matches he had at the table in the dining car. At first, Missy and I thought he might have opened the door to smoke and fallen out.'
Pavlik took the matchbook. â“Titanium”?'
âApparently it's a “gentleman's club,” or at least that's what Missy called it. Knowing her gift for sugar-coating, it could be a brothel, or even an S&M dungeon, for all we know.'
âI think we'll position you in here for now,' he called back to Boyce, who was still in the vestibule talking with Engineer Hertel.
The two men joined us. âI assume people can use the restroom here in the passenger car?' Boyce asked.
âYes, but nobody goes through the vestibule into the sleeping car.' Pavlik nodded toward the door that had just closed behind the engineer. âI'll see if I can find you a chair so you can sit with your back up against the door to the vestibule, facing into the rest of the passenger car.'
âYes, sir,' Boyce said, taking up the position. This time even I could see the military in his bearing. I felt, rather than saw, his hand itching to rise in a salute.
Guard stationed, Pavlik, Hertel and I paused. I could hear the buzz of speculation coming from the rows of seats beyond the restroom.
âAfter we settle down the passengers,' Pavlik told the engineer, âyou and I will go to the locomotive, where we'll call the authorities. You'd have a better idea than I do which jurisdicâ'
But Hertel was shaking his head. âSorry, but as I told your girl here,' he hooked a thumb back to me, âwe're purely in-commun-i-cado out here.'
âWhat do you use?' Pavlik asked. âRadio?'
âWell, now, this being a new line and our being a little off the grid, official-wise, I have this.' He held up a cell phone, and not even a very smart one.
I was still trying to translate âoff the grid, official-wise' to plain English. âWhat exactlyâ'
We were interrupted by Missy, who had added the wringing of hands to her repertoire. âWe're doing our best, but people are getting very impatient for answers. We ⦠we haven't told Audra.' Missy's voice broke. I could see tears.
Pavlik squeezed her shoulder. âI'm sorry â this shouldn't all fall back on you.'
âHe's just wonderful,' she whispered to me as Pavlik strode to the front of the car.
While I couldn't echo the worshipful tone, I did the sentiment.
âExcuse me,' Pavlik said, standing in the aisle at the front of the car. Zoe was seated in the first window seat, twisted around to Markus behind her. I wondered how much help either had been to Missy in keeping a lid on things.
At least they'd herded the group as instructed into the passenger car. There were just a few seats to spare, including the one next to Zoe. I took it, feeling charitable. âHow are you?'
âBetter,' she said, looking surprised that I'd asked. âThough I'm not sure why. We're in a terrible fix.'
âWhat's happened?' Prudence called from a few rows back. She was sitting next to Rosemary Darlington. âWhy have we stopped?'