strong. The smell, I mean. Bambi had to have had a real pile of it to be able to detect the odor. And to make the stomach contents alkaline as they were.â
McIntire nodded. Heâd expected as much.
âThere wasnât much in his stomach,â the doctor went on, âa few bites of ham, some brandy, microscopic bits of leaf and the definite odor of a variety of lobelia commonly known as Indian tobacco.â
â
Indian
tobacco? This is starting to sound like a bad joke.â Not that McIntire felt much like laughing. âI figured it must be some kind of poison that killed him.â
âWell, it wasnât.â
âNow you lost me.â
âLobelia takes a long time to act. And itâs a powerful emetic. Anybody consuming lethal levels would probably upchuck it before it did much harm. Regardless, Bambi Morlen died before he absorbed enough of it to have an effect.â
âAnd, of course, he did vomit some of it up,â McIntire remembered.
âSomebody vomited, but it wasnât Bambi.â
McIntire waited. Guibard sipped his drink and returned his glass to the table.
âThere was no sign that anything that boy ate went any direction except down. The person that puked on the floor in that loft wasnât Bambi. But whoever it was might also have partaken of the poison.â He paused. âPossibly.â
âThen what did kill him?â
âHe bled to death.â
Now McIntire put down his glass. âHowâd you figure that? I didnât see a drop of blood except on his head, and you said he was already dead when that happened.â
âThe bleeding was internal.â
âHis brain?â
âJohn! No, not his brain. He was stabbed. A small wound in his back, only a bit of a poke. It closed up right away, but the weapon nicked the pulmonary artery. He bled to death internally. Seeped to death is more like it. It might have taken quite a while. He could have been up walking around in the meantime. For sure, he put his coat on after he was stabbed. It didnât have a hole in it. He maybe lived as much as an hour, possibly more, depending on how active he was. Might not even have realized he was injured until he started getting woozy.â
âNot realize it? Wouldnât the fact heâd just been stabbed in the back give him a clue?â
âThereâs not a lot of sensation for pain there. Heâd have probably felt the whack, but not necessarily know it was anything more than a blow. â
âSo it might not have happened in the woodshed?â
âNo. It could very well have happened somewhere else. If he was active, say walking, or involved in a struggle with his attackers, he would have bled quicker. But if he was just sitting in a car, drivingâ¦who knows? Like I said, the rest of itâthe binding and gagging, the mutilationâall that was done some time after he died. There was no bruising or scrapes from the cords and no sign that heâd put up any fight against them. Anyhow, the way they were tied a two-year-old could have gotten free.â
McIntire figured he was, after all, as thick as Guibard took him to be. All was not being made clear. After a short hesitation McIntire asked, âYou said something about a hole in his skull?â
âNot quite a hole, but it was like I figured. Someone tried to drill right through the bone using a bit brace. The human skull is pretty tough though. Whoever did it may not have put a lot of effort into it. At any rate he didnât make much headway, so to speak.â
âYour unfailing sense of humor is a marvel.â McIntire didnât want to think about that hole, inflicted after death or no. âDid you find anything else of importance, a few stray bullet wounds, maybe evidence of strangulation?â
Guibard laughed outright. âWell. He did have a bit of abrasion on his neck, but I doubt it contributed to his death. Unless the young
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