Gabe nodded, then looked at Theo the way the coroner always looks at the cop on TV — like: You numbskull, don't you know that you're contaminating evidence just by continuing to draw breath and I'd be a lot more comfortable with you if you'd stop?
He took the bag over to the microscope on the counter, removed a couple of the hairs, and put them on a slide with a cover, then fitted it into the microscope.
"Please don't tell me it's polar bear," Theo said.
"No, but at least it's an animal. It seems to have a distinct sour-cream-and-onion signature." Gabe pulled back from the microscope and grinned at Theo. "Just fucking with you." He gave Theo a gentle punch to the arm and looked back into the microscope. "Wow, the medulla is absent and there's low birefringence."
"Wow," echoed Theo, trying but not really feeling the low-birefringence stoke that Gabe was.
"I have to check the hair database online, but I think it's from a bat."
"There's a database for that? What, Bat Hair Dot-Com?"
"That was supposed to be the whole purpose of the Internet, you know. To share scientific information."
"Not a Viagra- and porn-delivery system?" Theo said. Maybe Gabe was going to be okay after all.
Gabe moved to the computer at his desk and scrolled through screen after screen of microscope photos of mammal hair until he found one he liked, then went back to the microscope and checked it again.
"Wow, Theo, you've got yourself an endangered species here."
"No way."
"Where the hell did you get this? Micronesian giant fruit bat."
"Out of a Dodge pickup truck."
"Hmm, that's not listed as their habitat. It wasn't parked in Guam, was it?"
Theo fished his car keys out of his pocket. "Look, Gabe, I have to go. Meet at the Slug for a beer tonight, okay?"
"We can have beer now, if you want. I have some in the fridge."
"You need to get out. I need to get out. Okay?" Theo was backing out the door.
"Okay. I'll meet you at six. I have to go pick up some Super Glue solvent at the Thrifty-Mart."
"Bye." Theo jumped off the porch and loped to the Volvo.
Skinner barked at him in four-four time. Hello? Tasty white squirrels? Still in the little box? Hello? You forgot?
* * *
When Theo pulled up to Lena Marquez's house, there was a generic white economy rental car (A Ford Mucus, he thought) parked out front. He looked for the bat he'd seen hanging from the porch ceiling, but it wasn't there. He hadn't even filed the experience of running over the apparently indestructible blond guy, and now he was facing the possibility that he might actually be about to confront a murderer. Just in case, he'd stopped at home and gotten his gun off the shelf in the closet and his handcuffs off the bedpost where Molly had last imprisoned him when they had still been speaking. (She'd been in the yard out behind the cabin, working out with a bamboo shinai kendo sword she'd been using since breaking her broadsword — he'd snuck in and out without confrontation.) He unsnapped the Glock's nylon holster that was clipped to the back of his jeans and rang the doorbell.
The door opened. Theo screamed and drew his gun as he jumped back.
On the other side of the threshold, Tucker Case screamed and dove backward also, shielding his face with his hands. His hat made a little yelping sound.
"Hold it right there," Theo said. He could feel his pulse beating in his neck.
"I'm holding, I'm holding. Jesus, what the fuck is this about?"
"You have a bat on your head!"
"Yeah, and for that you're going to shoot me?"
The bat, his huge black wings wrapped around the pilot's head, gave the impression of a large leather cap with a Mohawk crest of fur that culminated in a big-eared little dog face that was now barking at Theo.
"Well, uh, no." Theo lowered the gun, feeling a little embarrassed now. He was still in his shooter's crouch, though, which now, with the gun lowered, made him look like he was posing as the world's skinniest sumo wrestler.
"Can I get up?" Tuck asked.
"Sure, I just wanted to talk to Lena."
Tucker Case was exasperated and his bat had fallen over one eye. "Well, she's at her office. Look, if you're going to get high, maybe you ought to leave the gun at home, huh?"
"What?" Theo had been careful to use some Visine, and it had been hours since he'd hit his Sneaky Pete pot pipe. He said, "I'm not high. I haven't gotten high in years."
"Yeah, right. Constable, maybe you'd better come in."