BREAKBONE FEVER CHAPTER TWO: THREE MEN MAKE A TIGER So the doctors came on the evening train With their flasks, and their caskets, and vials "Mass psychosis" was the diagnosis So we all cashed our checks and went wild. - Squirrel Nut Zippers, "La Grippe" The first thing the patient said when House walked into the exam room was, "I'm here against my will." "Join the club. We have jackets," he replied. Not only did the diagnostician find his required clinic hours beneath his dignity, what was far worse was that they were boring. There was the occasional mildly amusing case, like the teenage boy who'd set his cell phone on vibrate and stuck it where the sun don't shine, but for the most part clinic duty was an endless trudge of drippy noses, mild coughs, and miscellaneous aches and pains that could be easily treated by the patient's regular doctor. House blamed the internet for half the traffic in and out of the clinic. He would love to personally lethally stab whoever was behind wrongdiagnosis.com, for example. Wipe your ass and find blood on the toilet paper? It could be a simple anal fissure or it could be (and here he always heard a cheesy drama chord) colorectal cancer! Of course, the patients who thought their ability to use Google meant they had a right to a medical opinion always decided they were in their death throes, because human beings have an innate sense of melodrama with no balancing sense of proportion. And then, lucky him, he got to spend hours assuring them through gritted teeth that no, he didn't need to give them a proctology exam, all they needed to do was lay off the fiber and switch to a higher grade of bog roll. The new patient certainly was a change from the usual panicky schlubs House had to deal with. He perched on the exam table still fully clothed, not to mention dressed well enough to make anyone else look as though they had been wearing the same shirt for three days, which House was, in point of fact. He looked sublimely out of place in the cold, sterile little room. "Let me guess," House said. "Bad bit of pâté foie gras at the yacht club's social? I see you came dressed for your own funeral, that's encouraging." The man didn't crack a smile. Did not, in fact, register any emotion at all. His blanched, ascetic face looked as if he were incapable of any expression besides a lordly disdain. Just add a pair of pointy prosthetic ears, and he'd be snapped up in a second by a casting director looking for a Vulcan or the King of the Elves. House busied himself checking over the man's chart. This AXL Pendergast - did he have three given names, or was he a Guns N' Roses fan? - had collapsed while investigating a crime scene, which was admittedly interesting. Not a cop. FBI. He'd come by ambulance and been admitted with high fever, headache, and a hemorrhagic rash. Under questioning, he admitted in a quiet, uninflected voice that a few days ago he had developed tooth-chattering chills and a low grade fever, and that his muscles had felt sore and bruised. "And you figured it would just go away," House asked. "I did. And I was correct. The symptoms disappeared. I've been under a lot of strain lately, Doctor. And even the most well-adapted human being can succumb to physical and psychological stress." Pendergast turned slightly, fixing his gaze on a chart of skin diseases on the wall. "I enjoyed a few asymptomatic days, then woke yesterday with another fever spike, aching eyes, and a rash. When I flossed my teeth that morning I tasted salt." "Let me see that rash." Pendergast unbuttoned his cuffs and rolled them back, baring his arm. House noted that although the man seemed thin to the point of frailty, the muscles of his forearm were sharply delineated, defined without gym brat bulkiness, and he had the bulging, wide-bore veins of an athlete. But most of his attention was captured by the rash. Against the paper white skin, it looked as though someone had drawn shooting stars in purple ink. "Normally, I would have tried to carry on," Pendergast said as House continued to run through some quick exams. For his own amusement more than anything else, House shined a light into Pendergast's eyes, holding it so the beam fell almost directly across. The man squinted painfully, and House was rewarded by seeing the silvery blue of his iris take on a distinct purple cast. "However, one of my colleagues noticed my gums bleeding, and when I experienced a momentary faintness, he insisted the ambulance bring me here." Momentary faintness, my ass, tough guy, House thought. According to what the other FBI agent who`d accompanied him in said, Pendergast had suddenly exhibited delusional behavior, crawling on the ground, grabbing at something invisible in the air, then did a face plant onto the ground and remained insensible for several minutes. "Good thing, too. Any episode of loss of consciousness should be checked out, and your other symptoms suggest meningococcemia." "A bacterial infection of the blood?" Pendergast looked mildly surprised. "It can infect the meninges of the brain, which is the important bit, but actually, I have suspicions it's something different. Ever hear of dengue?" Pendergast frowned. "As I understand it, dengue is a disease of the tropics. Carried by mosquitoes, correct?" "There are two potential mosquito carriers in the southern US and Mexico, Aedes aegypti and Aedes albopictus. Do you recall being bitten?" "I have been in New York since early this summer," he said. "I arrived here a week ago." Now it was House's turn to frown. Dengue did not lay dormant for very long. Pendergast must have been bitten in New Jersey, unless it were not dengue at all. But his symptoms did not quite seem right for meningococcemia. He decided to bluff his way through it. After all, Pendergast was a patient. It was House's job to figure out what was wrong and what to do about it; it was Pendergast's job to shut up, lay still, and be cured. "At any rate, if it's bacterial we can knock it out with broad spectrum antibiotics. I'm going to admit you for a few days until your lab tests normalize . . . " he trailed off. Pendergast was shaking his head, no. "I have work to do. I can't be spared, I'm afraid." "No one's irreplaceable except Hendrix, and you ain't Hendrix." "Will you take responsibility for the next murder," Pendergast asked. House was taken momentarily aback. Murder? Well, why else would an FBI agent be poking around . . . and then he realized that no FBI agent in his right mind would be so loose-lipped about an investigation. Pendergast was attempting to bluff him. If he hadn't been endangering his own health, House would have admired Pendergast's chutzpah. As it was, his primate subcortex was ooking and eeking at him that he needed to teach this guy you don't challenge the alpha male on his own turf. To mix a metaphor, this silverback still had an ace up his sleeve. "Look, you're shocky, you're not thinking straight. As a matter of fact . . . " House grinned evilly. "As a matter of fact, Agent Pendergast, you might not be in full possession of your facilities. I'm going to have to admit you against your will, for your own safety." "That's illegal," Pendergast said emphatically. "And you're free to contest it. Call your lawyers." House dug out his cell phone and tossed it on the exam table. "By the time they spring you, you'll be feeling so much better you won't even want to sue me." Pendergast stood up - and immediately slumped forward. "Insufficient blood volume," House explained cheerfully, catching him by the arm. He felt Pendergast flinch under his grip. "Luckily, you'll be so woozy we won't have to do anything undignified like put you in restraints." The agent looked for a moment as if he were going to do something that certainly would get him placed in restraints, then reconsidered. Tightlipped, not meeting House's eyes, Pendergast docilely allowed himself to be led out of the exam room. Forty minutes later, House gathered his diagnostic team and presented the case to them. Although he would never admit it, something about this case was bothering him. "So why are we meeting," Foreman asked. "It's dengue, isn't it? The petechial rash is pretty clearly diagnostic." House shook his head. "Sadly, one bothersome little fact destroys your lovely theory. The patient hasn't been overseas or anywhere he could have encountered a dengue-carrying mosquito." "Are you sure?" Chase persisted. "Maybe he just can't tell us." "Can't tell us? Jeez, is he deaf-mute, too?" Foreman, who hadn't seen Pendergast yet, leaned back in his chair and caught Cameron's eye. He subvocalized, Too? Albino, Cameron mouthed silently. Foreman frowned, shook his head slightly and mouthed back, What? Al-bi-no, she said, exaggerating her lip movements to distinctly shape each syllable. "Wow, that's sexy," House interrupted, fanning himself with Pendergast's chart. They jumped, guilty. "What she's trying to tell you is that he's hypopigmented; he has Type 2 oculocutaneous albinism, commonly called gray-eyed albinism. Slight amount of pigment present, enough to negate some of the visual acuity problems associated with OCA1a and OCA1b, but not enough to, say, tan." He plucked invisible strings and hummed a few bars of Dueling Banjos, pulling a weird, cross-eyed face. "Actually, he's very good looking," Cameron protested. "He's handsome the way a purebred dog is. His family tree probably makes the Hapsburg dynasty look like a pack of mongrels." "Are you suggesting he's inbred?" Foreman scoffed. "Albinism isn't necessarily a result of inbreeding, and inbreeding doesn't always result in genetic damage, it just increases the chances of doubling up on bad chromosomes." "Yeah, I know." House widened his eyes in mock innocence. "But how much do you want to bet he's got a bug up his ass about it?" "What I meant was," Chase said, "If he's FBI, maybe he's working undercover on a case or something." "One unsolved murder does not a spree make," House said. He looked at each of them in turn. "Thoughts?" "Meningococcemia," Foreman said with finality. "Unless you can explain where Pendergast found a dengue-carrying mosquito around here, I'll have to agree," Chase added, shrugging. Cameron nodded. "Have you ever heard of the 'Three Men Make a Tiger' fallacy? No? Apparently, some ancient Chinese emperor came up with it. If a man said he saw a tiger in a crowded marketplace, you'd think he was mad or lying. If two men claimed to see a tiger, you might have your doubts. But if three men swore they saw it, the emperor said he'd have to believe no matter how ludicrous the idea of a tiger was . . . " Cameron said, "It doesn't make a difference, does it? We're sure it's one of those two, so we just put him on the ampicillan. If it's meningococcemia, he'll get better, and if it's dengue, it won't hurt." As she spoke, House felt his pager go off. He glanced at the text scrolling across the tiny screen. "Actually, we won't do either. He's gone." Pendergast hadn't merely left against medical advice, he'd disappeared. * * * * * Now that the visiting Special Agent had been admitted to Princeton-Plainsboro hospital and the evidence from the Morgan case was in the capable hands of the forensic team, Agent Kittredge found himself at loose ends. He had the vague idea he should stay with Pendergast out of courtesy if nothing else, but Pendergast himself had dissuaded him of that notion pretty quickly. Then he'd tried to corner a doctor in charge of him, but the tall, scrawny man with the jackdaw's nest of graying curls and a three day growth of beard had limped past him without a word, leaving it to one of his underlings to explain what was going on. Pendergast, he'd said, was suffering from some sort of infection they didn't know the source of. If it was bacterial it could be treated with strong antibiotics, if viral there was nothing to do but make him comfortable and treat the symptoms as they occurred. Since it would be a few days until the lab work told them the cause for certain, they'd started him on antibiotics just in case. Either way, it involved keeping Pendergast in bed, quiet, and watched over for some time. Kittredge had thanked them profusely, phoned the FBI offices and informed them of what was happening, taken a last look at Pendergast, arranged to have the man's small amount of luggage sent to his hospital room, and then decided it might be worthwhile to visit the crime scene once again. The drive into the forest took over an hour, and the trip in Kittredge's car was considerably less comfortable than in that silver monster Pendergast drove. The Rolls might look antique, but judging from the excellent suspension the man had had it completely modernized. Kittredge, who'd for the last year or so spent his days off restoring a Harley Knucklehead, tried to have a conversation with him about vintage vehicles on the trip up, but Pendergast didn't bite. Hadn't, for that matter, hardly said two words to Kittredge since he arrived. Cold bastard, Kittredge decided, and it was fairly clear he considered Kittredge himself a bit of a dingleberry (in both senses of the word). It had been like pulling teeth just to get the small amount of information about the cult killers from him. There was no paperwork to look at all. Pendergast more or less swooped down and snatched Kittredge away without a how d'you do. He got the strong impression that the man's investigation was perhaps not entirely official. He wondered if, in fact, Pendergast had been ill for longer than the doctors thought. He'd heard about the New York headhunter murders, of course. They were the bread and butter of the all-news networks for a few days, until some blonde heiress had gone missing and an avalanche buried a small town in Argentina. While the facts that a cult of killers had been chopping off people's heads in Manhattan was indisputable, there was nothing in Kittredge's opinion to link them with anything going on here in New Jersey. When Pendergast arrived, in fact, there had not been a murder at all. It was almost as if he were expecting what happen to Tom Morgan to occur . . . he'd appeared in anticipation, a psychopomp in a Italian suit. Kittredge let out a morbid laugh. And he got what he expected, apparently. So far, the forensics team had come up with nothing that could be identified as traces of the killer, no bits of thread, no hair, just fur and blood and gobbets of flesh from the deer he had shot. The site hadn't even yielded any valuable tracks except Morgan's, his wife's, and dozens of cloven hoof prints. It was as if he'd been slaughtered by something insubstantial, supernatural. Ghostly. Brenda Morgan still insisted that what killed her husband was neither human nor animal. She'd even made a drawing for them. Childish, probably useless, it depicted an upright figure with a long neck and narrow head, skinny arms with knifelike claws on its hands, legs with either too many joints or backwards knees, and cloven hooves. Now, as he pulled off into the small clearing, Kittredge couldn't quite shake the feeling that Pendergast was on to something. Perhaps his actions had all been due to illness, but when he last saw the other agent there had been no feverish befuddlement in his expression. He stood for a moment, taking in the scene. In the arctic austerity of the late winter afternoon, the leafless trunks of cedars and oaks stained red by the lowering sun, the Barrens looked every bit as desolate as its name. Yellow police tape still marked off the crime scene, but even to Kittredge's trained eye there wasn't much left to see. The dense carpet of fallen leaves, orange pine needles and straggly weeds had been swept away, and anything of interest bagged, labeled, and removed. Even the tracks of the Morgan's truck were vanishingly faint in the permafrosted soil. Here and there were the shallow craters left from where footprints had been lifted in plaster casts. Kittredge slowly walked the perimeter, bending low to get a clearer look at suspiciously bent twigs and trampled moss. When he recognized the spot where Pendergast had fainted, he even lowered himself onto all fours and sniffed the ground, wondering what the man had detected. There was only the faint scent of pine and the earthy mustiness of long dead leaves. Feeling a bit ridiculous, Kittredge scrambled upright. Already the cold had soaked into his knees and palms through the thin cloth. What did he think he was going to smell? Traces of sulfur from the hooves of the Jersey Devil? He sighed. That had been the weirdest part of Pendergast's visit. For the first few days he'd been ferried around to historical societies and libraries where he'd sat staring at the wall and wilting from boredom while Pendergast spent endless hours leafing through old maps and books printed before the Revolutionary War. He had no clue what the man was looking for, and Pendergast obviously did not care for him to know. Any offers of help he made were politely but firmly rebuffed. He wondered if the agent were killing time until the murder he predicted would happen, or if there was some link between his research and the investigation. At the time, he had suspected the former, since among the other things Pendergast had done were stop at just about every little mom and pop shop and buy pamphlets and small press books on the Jersey Devil. It was a bit of a disappointment that Pendergast was as goofy over the stupid old legend as any other tourist. Maybe he had a Fox Mulder complex. Kittredge was spontaneously and totally disgusted. Pendergast was playing him for a stooge. The sun was almost below the horizon now, and a bitter wind rustled the branches and numbed his nose and ears. All he wanted now was to go home, order a meatball sub from the deli by his house, maybe watch some of his Tivo backlog or work on the Harley. There was absolutely no demonstrable link between Morgan's death and the cult killers, hence no reason for FBI to be involved. If Pendergast wanted to chase devils, he could wait till he kicked this flu or whatever it was and do it his own self. He was mentally composing a request to shift responsibility for Pendergast to some other sap when the wind died down a bit . . . and the rustling sound didn't. Instantly, Kittredge was on high alert. Of all the explanations he'd heard, he thought that bear attack was the most reasonable sounding one for Morgan's death. He didn't know much about bears. Shouldn't they be hibernating at this time of year? That had raised the prospect of a bear that was sickened, maybe rabid. And here he was, a man alone in growing darkness armed with a standard issue Glock with laser sights he'd added at his own expense. He could bring down a human being, no problem. But a bear? He had no idea, and he didn't plan on staying around to find out. Keeping his gun aimed in the direction of the rustling, he backed slowly towards his car, shivering as he clenched his muscles against the atavistic impulse to run like hell. Could bears smell fear? What did that smell like, anyways? The sourness of sweat, a spike in adrenaline? Perspiration popped out over his forehead, moistened his armpits, trickled down his spine and pooled in the curve of his lower back. Hell, he probably stank like fear on rye with a side order of pickles. It was probably nothing. A squirrel or a raccoon. Something small and cute and harmless, the sort of critter who'd be the sidekick to a Disney heroine. He was past the crime scene now, almost to the car. Even as he felt his heel catch in a rut, as he overbalanced and fell flat on his back, Kittredge was able to think clearly. Stooge. It was the last lucid thought he had. Something dark and demonic stepped from the trees into the clearing. Kittredge lay there on the cold ground, stunned, as if he'd stepped through brittle ice and plunged into a fast moving river. He took the creature in a series of disbelieving glances, unable to focus on any section of its horrible aspect for too long. Humanlike in stance but animal in the details, goatish, apelike, dinosaurian. Huge, towering over eight feet tall on its crooked hind legs. Long sweeping tail, scaly and sparsely coated with coarse hair, like a rat's. Eyes glowing an unnatural reddish-gold. Muscular arms raised up, thick mats of shaggy fur hanging down like clumps of Spanish moss. Gleaming, scimitar claws stretching out yearningly, then snapping closed like a trap. The frost caves of Kittredge's brain suddenly began to function with crystalline clarity. He seemed to watch, detached from his own body, as his arm raised the gun, waiting until the little red dot danced between those blazing eyes, his finger tightened and the gun jumped in his hand . . . * * * * * Wilson leaned on the front desk, flirting pathetically with the nurses who flocked around him like pigeons on a handful of crumbs. He was summing up the latest news with, "And House must be mad enough to bite nails," when he felt an unfriendly hand clamp on his shoulder. "I checked, but there aren't any rust stains on my teeth," House said from behind him. He grabbed Wilson by the sleeve and dragged him towards his office, growling, "Gossiping about me to the nurses? What is this, third grade? Should I check the back of my head to make sure Marjorie Harris isn't flicking boogers at me again?" Wilson, who knew House was well aware of his own reputation as one of the more gossipy fishwives at Princeton-Plainsboro, had the great good sense to try to look convincingly penitent and keep his mouth shut until the door slammed behind them. "You know, it's just funny. You can handle the patients not being able to grasp what you're telling them, or disagreeing, or even flipping out and cracking you in the rear with your own cane." House grimaced. That had hurt more than he'd let on. "But this guy just accepts, understands, and then completely blows you off and goes on his merry way, and you can't cope." He chortled. "It's killing you." "No, it's killing him." House flung himself in Wilson's most comfortable chair and restively tapped his cane against the corner of the desk. "Look, House. What does it say on my door?" He glanced up at the glass door obediently and read, "Tsigolocno." "And what does that mean I do?" "Treat recnac?" "Exactly, and this secret agent of yours doesn't have recnac. So what are you doing here putting dents in my desk? He has meningococcemia or possibly dengue, and if he stays outside for much longer he'll likely have frostbite and severe hypothermia." "And dementia. Don't forget the dementia." "From what I heard, the dementia is extremely debatable to the point of being delusional on your part. Pendergast is a grown man, he knows the risks of what he`s doing. There`s no point having his competence called into question and giving the hospital's lawyers yet another reason to want to throttle you in your sleep." "Hah. You're looking at the former high school debate club champion. Check these out." Out of his jacket pocket he produced a handful of pamphlets, booklets and brochures, ranging from slick full color numbers to bad photocopies that had obviously been hand folded and stapled. All were on the same subject and all of them were heavily annotated in a tiny, cramped version of Pendergast's distinctive copperplate hand. "Seems he's a Devil fan, and I don't mean the hockey team." "I hardly think interest in a local version of Bigfoot is a sign of dementia." "I'm not talking about interest, I'm talking about belief." House leaned across Wilson's desk, lowering his voice to a conspiring whisper. "I googled our buddy Pendergast. If that's his real name, he keeps a low profile. Only one juicy link came up, in an excerpt from a book about the Museum Beast murders a few years back." "So you think he thinks the Jersey Devil is a real animal, and it killed that hunter and maybe some other people? I don't know which of you needs the psych consult more." Wilson sighed and massaged his forehead. "Come on, House. Let security handle this, it's their fault he slipped out in the first place. Just admit what's really bothering you is you think the guy outwitted you personally." Realizing no amount of reasoning would sway Wilson, House gave the innocent desk a final vindictive whack and leaned back, almost pouting. "How the hell do you lose a six foot three albino, anyway?" "In a snowstorm?" Wilson glanced out the window, where a few tentative flakes were falling with a deceptively picturesque prettiness from ominous slate blue clouds. House grunted irritably. The state troopers very well might, if Pendergast decided to go back and finish scouring the crime scene. Wilson hadn't been joking about the potential for severe hypothermia. The cops could end up not finding Pendergast until the thaw, in the form of a cryogenically preserved corpse washed by the spring runoff into the cedar-stained blood red waters of the Mullica River. "Unless . . . " House's head lifted, his pale eyes suddenly alight. "Unless, of course, he weren't albinistic at the time." "What?" But House was already out the door at the closest gait he could manage to a sprint.