Tuesday
1
Blessed be the blackmailers, Jack thought as he pawed
through the filing cabinet.
He had a penlight clamped in
his teeth and kept it trained on the labels of the hanging folders while his
latex-gloved fingers fanned through them.
What a trove. If someone
could be called a professional blackmailer, Richie Cordova fit the bill.
Private investigation was his legitimate line, if such a line could be legit.
But apparently he dug up lots of additional dirt during the course of his
investigations, and put that to work for him. Never against his clients, Jack
had learned. Did his blackmailing anonymously. That kept his professional rep
clean, kept that stream of referrals from satisfied clients flowing. But Jack
had picked him up on a money drop Cordova had set up for his latest fish and
took an instant dislike to the fat slob. Nine days of shadowing him hadn't mellowed
that initial impression. The guy was a jerk.
Cordova's PI office occupied
a second floor space over an Oriental deli on the other side ofBronxPark . But
his other line of work, probably the more profitable one, was here on the third
floor of his house. Small and stuffy, furnished with the filing cabinet, a
computer, a high-end color printer, and a rickety desk, it appeared to be a
converted attic.
Where was the letter? Jack
was counting on it being in this cabinet. If not-
There...Jank. Could that
stand for Jankowski? He pulled out the file and opened it. Yep. This was it.
Here was the handwritten letter at the root of Stanley Jankowski's problems.
Cordova had found it and was using it to squeeze the banker for all he was
worth.
Jack tucked it in his
pocket.
Yes, blessed be those
blackmailers, he thought as he began emptying the folders from both drawers of
the cabinet and dropping their contents-letters, photos, negatives-onto the
floor, for they help keepeth me in business.
Blackmail was the reason a
fair percentage of Jack's customers came to him. Stood to reason: They were
being blackmailed because they had something they wanted kept secret; couldn't
go to officialdom because then it would no longer be a secret. So they were
left with two options: pay the blackmailer again, and again, and again, or go
outside the system and pay Jack once to find the offending photos or documents
and either return them or destroy them.
Destroying was better and
safer, Jack thought. But untrusting customers feared Jack might simply use the
material to start blackmailing them on his own. Jankowski had been burned and
wasn't about to trust no one no how no more. He wanted to see the letter before
he paid the second half of Jack's fee.
Jack spread the two drawers'
worth of photos and documents on the floor. A small, voyeuristic part of him
wanted to sit and sift through them, looking for names or faces he recognized,
but he resisted. No time. Cordova would be back in an hour.
He pulled a pair of glass
Snapple bottles out of his backpack and unwrapped the duct tape from around
their tops. He was about to do a big favor for some of the people in that pile.
Not all. Cordova had probably scanned all this stuff into a computer and had
digital copies stashed away somewhere. But a scan couldn't sub for a
handwritten letter. Cordova needed the original, with its ink and fingerprints
and all, to have any real leverage. A copy, no matter how close to the
original, was not the real deal and could be dismissed as a clever fake.
He looked down at the pile
of damning evidence. Some of these folks were about to get a freebie. Not
because Jack particularly cared about them-for all he knew, some of them might
deserve to be blackmailed-but because if he took just the Jankowski letter,
Cordova would know who was behind this little visit. Jack didn't want that.
With everything destroyed or damaged beyond repair, Cordova could only guess.
Burning the pile would have
been best but the guy lived in a tight little Williamsbridge neighborhood in
the upperBronx . Lots of nice, old, post-war middle-class homes stacked cheek
by jowl in a neat grid. If Cordova's place burned, it wouldn't burn alone. So
Jack had come up with another way.
He held one of the Snapple
bottles at arm's length as he unscrewed the cap. Even then the sharp odor stung
his nose. Sulfuric acid. Very carefully-this stuff would burn right through his
latex gloves-he began to sprinkle it on the pile, watching the glossy surfaces
of the photos smoke and bubble, the papers turn brown and shrivel.
He'd used up most of the
first bottle and the room was filling with acrid smoke when he heard the front
door slam three floors below.
Cordova?
Checked his watch: about a
quarter past midnight. In the past week or so that Jack had been shadowing him,
Cordova had hit a neighborhood bar over on White Plains Road three times, and
on each night he'd hung till 1A.M. or later. If that was Cordova downstairs, he
was home at least an hour early. Damn him.
Dumped the rest of the acid
from the first bottle and sloshed the contents of the second over the pile,
then left them atop the filing cabinet. Now to get out of here. Wouldn't be
long before Cordova detected the stink.
Opened the window and slid
out onto the roof. Looked around. He'd planned on leaving as he'd
entered-through the back door. Now he was going to have to improvise.
Jack hated to improvise.
Looked over at the neighboring
roof. Pretty close, but close enough to...?
Through the open window
behind him he heard Cordova's heavy feet pounding up the stairs. Another glance
at the neighboring roof. Guessed it was going to have to be close enough.
Hauling in a deep breath,
Jack took three running steps down the shingled slope and leaped. One sneakered
foot, then the other, landed on the opposing roof and found traction. Without
pausing to congratulate himself, Jack used his forward momentum to keep going,
his rubber soles slipping and scraping up the incline toward the peak.
A loud, whiny
"Noooooo!" followed by a bellow of rage and dismay echoed from
Cordova's house, but Jack didn't turn to look-didn't want Cordova to see his
face. Then he heard a shot and almost simultaneously felt the slugzing past his
ear.
Cordova had a gun! Jack had
figured he'd have one somewhere, but hadn't expected him to shoot up his own
neighborhood. Two miscalculations tonight. He hoped he hadn't miscalculated on
getting home alive.
Dove over the peak of the
roof and slid down toward the gutter, the shingles shredding the palms of his
latex gloves and wearing away the front of his nylon windbreaker like an
electric sander. Halfway to the gutter he slowed his slide and angled his body
ninety degrees. That slowed him a little more. Further angling around allowed
him to get his foot in the gutter and stop altogether.
Not home free yet. Still two
stories up with Cordova no doubt pelting down his stairs and heading for the
street. Plus this house was occupied, probably with two families, since that
seemed the rule around here. He could see the glow of lights turning on inside.
He was sure the owners were dialing 9-1-1 right now to report the racket on
their roof. Probably thought he was a clumsy second-story burglar.
Jack peeked over the gutter
and positioned himself over a dark window. Slid off the roof feet first and
belly down, easing his weight onto the gutter. It groaned and creaked and
sagged as he hung by his fingers. Before it could give way he managed to place
his feet on the windowsill and let that take his weight. Eased himself into a
crouch to where he could grip the sill with his hands, then dropped again. He
clung to the sill only a second or two, poising his feet a mere six feet off
the ground, then let go. He twisted in the air and hit the ground running.
His sneakers made no sound
as he sprinted along the sidewalk. He bent as low as he could without
compromising his speed and waited for a second shot. But none came. Took a left
at the first corner and a right at the next and kept running. At least now he
was out of the line of fire-if Cordova stayed on foot. But if he got into a car
and started cruising...
Plus, cops should be on
their way.
What a mess. This was
supposed to be a simple in-and-out job with no one the wiser until later.
Kept moving in a crouch,
watching the passing cars, on alert for flashing lights. Slipped out of his
partially shredded windbreaker-he was wearing a WWE Lance Storm T-shirt
beneath-and pulled the Mets cap from the pocket. Jammed the cap on his head and
bunched the jacket into a nylon lump the size of a softball. Palmed that and
slowed to a speedy walk.
Slowed further when he
hit232nd Street . Stuffed the windbreaker down into a trash receptacle as he
walked to the elevated subway station on 233rd. Caught the 2 train and settled
down for a long ride back toManhattan .
He patted the letter folded
in his jeans pocket. Another problem fixed. Jankowski would be happy, and
Cordova...
Jack smiled. Fat Richie
Cordova had to be fuming as much as the sulfuric acid on his photos and papers.
2
A man who was something more than a man crouched among the
foundation plantings of a two-story house in a quietConnecticut community. He
moved through the world under different guises, using different names, but
never his own, never his True Name. And as he traveled, doing what must be done
to prepare the way, he searched out places such as this family home.
He sat with his spine and the
back of his head pressed against the house's concrete foundation. Someone
coming upon him might have thought he was an indigent sleeping off a bender.
But he hadn't been sleeping. He required very little rest. He could go for days
without closing his eyes.
And even if this had been
one of those rare occasions when he needed rest, he would have found sleep
impossible while basking in the exhilarating emanations from the basement of
this house.
On the other side of the
wall...systematic torture, mutilation, and defilement. The victim wasn't the
first so abused by this family of three, and would not be the last. Or so the
man who was something more than a man hoped.
What the two adults within
had done to the ones they'd captured and imprisoned over the years would have
been sustenance enough for this man. But the fact that they had debased their
own child and made him a willing participant in the systematic defilement of
another human being...this was exquisite.
He flattened his back more
firmly against the wall, drinking, feasting...
3
After stopping at Julio's for a couple, Jack fell into bed
when he got home. Jankowski could wait till morning for the good news.
Somewhere around 3A.M. the
ringing of the front-room phone dragged him from slumberland. The answering
machine clicked on and out came a voice he hadn't heard in fifteen years.
"Jackie. This is your
brother Tom. Long time no see. I assume you're still alive, though it's hard to
tell. Well, anyway, Dad was in a car accident earlier tonight. He's in pretty
bad shape, in a coma, they tell me. So give me a call, prontissimo. We need to
talk."
He rattled off a number with
a 215 area code.
Jack had been up and moving
at the mention of his father's accident, but didn't reach the receiver in time
to pick up. He stood over the phone in the dark.
Dad? In an accident? In a
coma? How the hell-?
Unease trickled through his
gut. The past he'd cut himself off from was worming its way back into his life.
First he runs into his sister Kate last June, and a week later she's dead. Now,
three months after that, he hears from big brother Tom that his father's in a
coma. Was he detecting a scary symmetry here? A pattern?
Deal with that later, he
told himself. First find out what happened to Dad.
Jack replayed the message,
writing down the phone number. He used his Tracfone to return the call. That
same voice answered.
"Tom? Jack."
"Well, I'll be. The
long lost brother. The prodigal son. He lives. He returns a call."
Jack didn't have time for
this. "What's the story with Dad?"
Jack had never particularly
liked his brother. Hadn't disliked him either. They'd never had any sort of a
relationship growing up. Tom-Tom, Jr., officially-was ten years older and
seemed to have viewed his little brother as an inconvenient pet, one that belonged
to his parents and his sister but had nothing to do with him. He'd always been
self-involved to a fault. Kate had said he was on his third wife and hinted
that the latest marriage was headed for the same fate as his others. Jack
hadn't been surprised.
Tom had been a Philadelphia
lawyer for a couple of decades and was now aPhiladelphia judge. Which meant he
was an officer of the court, a cog in the wheels of officialdom. All the more
reason for Jack to keep his distance. Courts gave him the creeps.
"Pretty much what I
told you. I got a call from this nurse at theNovatonCommunityHospital that Dad
was involved in an MVA and-"
"M-V-?"
"Motor vehicle
accident-and that he's in bad shape."
"Yeah. A coma, right?
Jeez, what do we do?"
"Not we, Jackie.
You."
Jack didn't like the sound
of this. "I don't get you."
"One of us has to go
down there. I can't, and since Kate's not exactly available, that leaves
you."
"What do you mean, you
can't?"
"I-I'm in the middle of
a bunch of legal business...judicial matters that have me tied up."
"You can't get away to
see a comatose father?"
"It's complicated,
Jackie. Too complicated to go into on the phone at this hour of the morning.
Suffice it to say that I can't leave the city now."
Jack sensed a lot more going
on here than Tom was telling.
"Are you in some sort
of trouble?"
"Me? Christ, why would
you ask something like that?"
"Because you sound
funny."
Tom's tone took on a sharp
edge. "How would you know what I sound like? We haven't spoken in, what,
ten years, and you're going to tell me how I sound?"
"It's been fifteen
years"-not quite long enough, Jack thought-"and yeah, I'm telling you
you sound funny."
"Yeah, well, don't
worry about me. Worry about Dad. He gave me your number before he moved
toFlorida . 'Just in case,' he said. Well, 'just in case' just happened. Tag,
you're it."
Jack sighed. "All
right. I guess I'll go."
"Don't sound so
enthusiastic."
Jack shook his head. First
off, he hated to leaveNew York for any reason, period. Plus, this wasn't a good
time for him to be heading forFlorida or anywhere else. He had another fix-it
in the early stages of development, but he'd have to let it wait. Worse, an
emergency trip like this meant that driving and Amtrak were out. He'd have to
take a plane. He didn't mind flying itself, but all the extra security since 9-11
made an airport a scary place for a guy with no official identity.
But then, it was his father
down there.
Tom said, "In a way
you're lucky he's in a coma."
Strange thing to say.
"How's that?"
"Because he's pissed at
you for not showing up for Kate's funeral. Come to think of it, so am I. Where
the hell were you?"
As if he'd tell a judge,
even if that judge happened to be his big brother.
Big Brother...judge. How
Orwellian.
"Suffice it to
say," he said, deciding to give Tom a dose of his own medicine, "that
it's too complicated to go into on the phone at this hour of the morning."
"Very funny. I tell
you, though, I can't say I was unhappy about him taking a turn on you. All we
heard for years from him was how he wanted to reach you and bring you back into
the fold. That was how he put it: 'Bring Jack back into the fold.' It became
his mantra. He obsessed on it. But he's not obsessing anymore."
Jack felt he should be glad
to hear that-he'd had no intention of ever returning to any fold anywhere-but
he wasn't. Instead he felt a pang of regret, as if he'd lost something.
A decade and a half ago,
when Jack had dropped out of college, out of his family, and out of society in
general, his father spent years tracking him down. Somehow he found someone who
had Jack's number. He started calling. Eventually he wore Jack down to the
point where he agreed to meet him in the city for dinner. After that they got
together maybe once a year for a meal or a set of tennis.
A tenuous relationship at
best. The get-togethers were always uncomfortable for Jack. Though his father
had never said it, Jack knew he was disappointed in his younger son. Thought he
was an appliance repairman and was always pushing him to better himself-finish
college, get a pension plan, think about the future, retirement will be here
before you know it, blah-blah-blah.
Dad didn't have a clue about
what his younger son was about, the crimes he'd committed, the people he'd had
to kill while earning his living, and Jack never would tell him. The old guy
would be devastated.
"Where'd you say he
was?"
"NovatonCommunityHospital,
and don't ask me where that is because I don't know. Someplace inDadeCounty ,
I'd imagine. That's where he had his place."
"Where's-?"
"South ofMiami . Look,
the best thing to do is call the hospital-no, I don't have the number-and ask
for directions from Miami International. That's where you'll have to fly
into."
"Swell."
"If he wakes up,
explain to him that I'd be there if I could."
Sure you would, Jack
thought. And then it hit him.
"'Ifhe wakes up'?"
"Yeah. If. They say
he's banged up pretty bad."
Jack's chest ached.
"I'll leave as soon as I tie up a few loose ends here," he said,
suddenly tired.
He hung up. He had nothing
more to say to his brother.
4
Semelee awoke alone in the dark. She opened her eyes and
lay perfect still, listenin. She heard the breathin sounds of her clansmen
around her, some soft, some rough. She heard the creak of the old houseboat
timbers as it rocked gentle like, the soft lap of the lagoon water against the
hull, the croakin of frogs and the chirpin of crickets among the night sounds
of the otherEverglades critters. She jumped as someone nearby-Luke, most
likely-made a coughin sound that turned into a snore.
The thick hot air lay like a
damp sheet on the exposed skin of her arms and legs, but she was used to it.
This September was provin to be a hot one, but not like August.That had been a
hot one, hottest she could remember.
Why was she awake? She
usually slept straight through the night. And then she remembered the dream-not
the details, for they had vanished into the night like mornin mist before a
storm, but the overall feel of movement...movement toward her.
"Someone's comin,"
she whispered aloud.
She didn't know how she
knew, she just did. This weren't the first time she'd had a second sight. Every
so often, without warnin, she'd get a sense of somethin about to happen, and
then it did, it always did.
Someone was comin her way. A
him, a man, was on his way. She didn't know if that was a good thing or a bad
thing. Didn't matter. Either way, Semelee would be ready.
5
"Such bounty," Abe Grossman said, staring down
at the half dozen donuts laid out in the box before him. "I've done what
to deserve this?"
Jack said,
"Nothing...everything."
Abe's raised eyebrows sent
wrinkles like sets of surfing waves up his brow and into the balding bay of his
scalp to crash on the receding gray shore of his hairline. "But Krispy
Kremes? For me?"
"Forus ."
Jack dipped into the box and
extracted one of the crustier, sour-cream models, heavy with grease and glazed
to within an inch of its life. He took a big bite and closed his eyes. Damn,
these were good.
Abe made a face. "But
they're full of fat, those things." He rubbed his bulging waistline as if
he had a belly ache. "Like ladling concrete into the arteries."
"Probably."
"And to me you brought
them?"
The two of them flanked the
scarred rear counter of Abe's store, the Isher Sports Shop, Jack on the
customer side, Abe across from him, perched like Humpty Dumpty on a stool. Jack
made a show of looking around at the dusty cans of tennis balls, the racquets,
the basketballs and hoops, footballs and Rollerblades along with their
attendant padding shoved helter skelter onto sagging shelves lining narrow
aisles. Bikes and SCUBA gear hung from the ceiling. If the Collyer brothers had
been into sporting goods instead of newspapers, this is what their place might
have looked like.
"You see anyone else
around?"
"We're not open yet. I
should see no one."
"There you go."
Jack pointed to the donuts. "Come on. What are you waiting for?"
"This is a trick,
right? You're trying to pull one over on your old friend. You brought them for
Parabellum."
As if in response to his
name, Abe's little blue parakeet peeked out from behind a neon-yellow bicycle
safety helmet, spotted the donut box, and hopped across the counter to it.
Jack spoke around a mouthful
of donut. "Absolutely not."
Parabellum cocked his head
at the donuts, then looked up at Jack.
"Better not deny
him," Abe warned. "He's a fierce predator, that Parabellum. A raptor
in disguise, even."
"Oh, right." Jack
tore off a tiny piece and tossed it to the bird, who leaped on it.
"What happened to the
fat-free Entenmann's and the low-fat cream cheese?"
"We're taking a
vacation from all that."
Abe rubbed his belly
again."Nu ? I shouldn't be worried about my heart? You want I should die
before my time?"
"Jesus, Abe. Can we
have one breakfast without you complaining? If I bring in low-cal stuff, you
bitch. So here I bring the kind of stuff you always say you wish you were
eating instead, and you accuse me of trying to kill you."
Abe was past sixty and his
weight ran in the eighth-of-a-ton range, which wouldn't have been so bad if he
were six-eight; but he missed that by a foot, maybe more. Jack had become
concerned last year about his oldest and dearest friend's potential lack of
longevity and had been trying to get him to lose weight. His efforts had not
engendered an enthusiastic response.
"Such a crank he is
this morning."
Abe was right. Maybe he was
feeling a little short. Well, he had his reasons.
"Sorry," Jack
said. "Look at it this way: Think of them as a going-away present."
"Going? I'm going
somewhere?"
"No, I am. ToFlorida .
Don't know how long I'll be there so I figured I'd pre-load you with some
calories to tide you over."
"Florida? You want to
go toFlorida ? In September? In the middle of the worst drought they've had in
decades?"
"It's not a pleasure
trip."
"And the humidity. It
seeps into your pores, heads for the brain, makes youmeshugge . Water on the
brain-it's not healthy."
"Swell." Jack
drummed his fingers on the counter. "Eat a damn donut, will you."
"All right," Abe
said. "If you insist. Abisel ."
He picked one, took a bite,
and rolled his eyes. "Things should not be allowed to taste this
good."
Jack had a second donut
while he told Abe about his brother's call.
"I'm sorry to hear
this," Abe said. "This is why you're so cranky? Because you don't
want to see him?"
"I don't want to see
him like that...in a coma."
Abe shook his head.
"First your sister, and now..." He looked up at Jack. "You don't
think...?"
"The Otherness? I hope
not. But with the way things have been going lately, I wouldn't be
surprised."
After hanging up with Tom
last night he'd called the hospital and learned that his father was stable but
still on the critical list. He got directions from the airport, then tried to
watch a movie. He'd started a Val Lewton festival, watchingThe Cat People
Sunday night. He'd been looking forward to seeingI Walked with a Zombie , but
after starting it he couldn't get into it. Thoughts about his father in a coma
and getting through airport security proved too distracting. He'd shut if off
and lain in the dark, trying to sleep, but thoughts about an indefinable
something pulling the strings of his life kept him awake.
So this morning he was tired
and irritable. The chance that the accident might not have been so accidental
put him on edge.
"You have any details
on what happened?"
"Car accident is all I
know."
"That doesn't sound too
sinister. How old is he?"
"Seventy-one. But he's
in great shape. Still plays tennis. Or at least he did."
Abe nodded. "I remember
when he roped you into a father-son doubles match last summer."
"Right. Just before all
hell broke loose up here."
"Another summer like
that I don't need." Abe shook himself, as if warding off a chill.
"Oh, I may have something for you on that citizenship matter."
"Yeah? What?"
Since he'd found out last
month that he was going to be a father, Jack had been looking for a way to
sneak up from underground without having to answer the inevitable questions
from various agencies of the government as to where he'd been and what he'd
been doing for the last fifteen years, and why he'd never applied for a Social
Security Number and never filed a 1040 or paid a cent in taxes in all that
time.
He'd thought of simply
telling them he'd been ill-disoriented, possibly drug addled-wandering the
country, depending on the kindness of strangers, and now he was better and
ready to become a productive citizen. That would work, but in these suspicious
times it meant he'd be put under extra scrutiny. He didn't want to live the
rest of his life on the Department of Homeland Security's watch list.
"A contact inEastern
Europe called and said he thought maybe he had a way. Maybe. It's going to take
a little more research."
This bit of good news felt
like a spotlight through the gloom that had descended since Tom's call.
"Didn't he give you
even a hint?"
Abe frowned. "Over an
international phone line? From his country? He should be so foolish. When he
works out the details-if he can-he will let me know."
Well, maybe it wasn't such
good news. But at least it was potentially good news.
Abe was staring at
him."Nu ? You're leaving forFlorida when?"
"Today. Haven't booked
a flight yet though. Want to talk to Gia first, see if I can convince her to
come along."
"Think she'll go?"
Jack smiled. "I'm going
to make her an offer she can't refuse."
6
"Sorry, Jack," Gia said, shaking her head.
"It won't work."
They sat in the
old-fashioned kitchen of numbereight Sutton Square , one of the toniest
neighborhoods in the city, he nursing a cup of coffee, she sipping green tea.
Gia had been letting her corn-silk-colored hair grow out a little; it wasn't so
close to her head anymore, but still short by most standards. She wore low-cut
jeans and a white scoop-neck top that clung to her slim torso. Although into
her third month of pregnancy, she had yet to show even the slightest bulge.
Gia's discovery last month
that she was pregnant had thrown them both for a loop. It had not been on the
radar, and they hadn't been prepared for it. It meant changes for both of them,
most drastically for Jack, but they were dealing with it.
Jack had told her about his father
as soon as he stepped through her door this morning. Gia had never met him but
had been upset by the news and urged Jack to hurry down toFlorida . Jack didn't
share her sense of urgency. All he could do down there was stand next to his
unconscious father's bed and feel helpless; he could think of few things in the
world he hated more than feeling helpless. And if and when his father awoke,
how long before he started in on why Jack had missed Kate's funeral.
So Jack had sprung his plan
on Gia and she had shot him down.
He tried to hide his
disappointment. He'd thought it was a sure thing. He'd offered to fly her and
Vicky down toOrlando and put them up in Disney World. He'd shuttle back and
forth between his father and Orlando.
"How can you say
no?" he said. "Think of Vicky. She's never been to Disney
World."
"Yes, she has. We went
with Nellie and Grace when she was five."
Jack saw a cloud pass
through her sky-blue eyes at the mention of Vicky's two dead aunts.
"That was three years
ago. She needs another trip."
"Did you forget
school?"
"Let her play hooky for
a week. She's a bright kid. How much of a challenge can third grade be for
her?"
Gia shook her head.
"Uh-uh. New year, new class, new teacher. She just started two weeks ago.
I can't pull her out for a week this early in the year. If it was November,
maybe, but then"-she patted her tummy-"I'd be far enough along to
where I wouldn't want to fly."
"Swell," Jack
said. He took a turn patting her tummy. "How's Little Jack coming
along?"
"She's doing just
fine."
This had been their
tug-of-war since learning she was pregnant. Jack was sure it was a boy-had to
be-while Gia insisted it was a girl. So far the fetal doppler had been
inconclusive as to sex.
"Hey, I just had an
idea. What do you think about hiring Vicky a nanny for a week and..."
Gia's azure stare stopped
him. "You're kidding, right?"
He sighed. "Yeah, I
guess so."
What had he been thinking?
Obviously he hadn't. Gia going off to Disney World without her daughter? Never.
It would crush Vicky. And Jack would be as uncomfortable as Gia about leaving
her with anyone else for a week.
He leaned back and watched
her take tiny sips of her tea. He loved the way she drank tea, loved the way
her whole face crinkled up when she laughed. Loved the way she did everything.
They'd met a little over two years ago-twenty-six months, to be exact-but it
seemed as if he'd known her all his life. All the women before her, and there'd
been more than a few, had faded to shadows the first time he saw her smile. No
one had a smile like Gia's. They'd hit a few speed bumps along the way-her
discovery of how he earned his living had almost derailed them-and still didn't
see eye to eye on everything, but the deep regard and trust they'd developed
for each other allowed them to live with their differences.
Jack couldn't remember
feeling about anyone as he felt about Gia. Every time he saw her he wanted to
touch her-hadto touch her, even if only for an instant brush of his fingertips
against her arm. The only other person who approached Gia in his affections was
her daughter Vicky. Jack and Vicks had bonded from the get-go. He couldn't
think of too many people or things worth dying for, but two of them lived in
this house.
"Aww," Gia said,
smiling that smile and patting his knee. "Feeling shot down?"
"In flames. Looks like
I'll be going alone. Usually you're the one getting on a plane and
leaving." Gia made regular trips back toIowa to keep Vicky in touch with
her grandparents. Those weeks were like holes in his life. This one would be
worse. "Now it's me."
"I've got a cure for
those hurt feelings." She put her cup down, rose, and took his hand.
"Come on."
"Where?"
"Upstairs. It's going
to be a week. Let's give you a bon voyage party."
"Do we get to wear
dopey hats?"
"No hats allowed. No
clothes allowed either."
"My kind of
party."
7
Jack was feeling a little cross-eyed and weak in the knees
when they left Gia's. She had that effect on him.
On their way to his
apartment on the West Side-she'd volunteered to help him pack-he stopped at a
mailing service and picked up a couple of FedEx overnight boxes, along with
some bubble wrap.
"What are those
for?"
"Oh...just have to mail
a couple of things before I go."
He didn't want to tell her
more than that.
When they reached his
third-floor apartment in a West-Eighties brown-stone, he opened the windows to
let in some air. The breeze carried a tang of carbon monoxide and the throbbing
bass of a hip-hop song with the volume turned up to 11.
Gia said, "How are you
going to work this?"
"What do you
mean?"
"Buying the
ticket."
They stood in the cluttered
front room filled with Victorian wavy-grained golden oak furniture laden with gingerbread
carving.
"How else? Buy a ticket
and go."
"Who are you going to
be this time?"
"John L. Tyleski."
After careful consideration,
Jack had settled on Tyleski as his identity for the trip. Tyleski's Visa card,
secured with a dead kid's Social Security Number, was barely six months old,
and so far he'd made all his payments on time. Tyleski had aNew Jersey driver
license with his photo on it, courtesy of Ernie's ID. It was as bogus as
everything else Ernie sold, but the quality wasSterling .
"Isn't that
risky?" she said. "You get caught buying a ticket under an assumed
identity these days and you're in trouble. Big, Federal trouble."
"I know. But the only
way I can get caught is if someone checks the number on the driver license with
theJersey state DMV. Then I'm screwed. But they don't do that at
airports."
"Not yet."
He looked at her.
"You're not making this any easier, Gia."
She dropped into a wing-back
chair, looking worried. "I just don't want to turn on the news tonight and
hear that they're investigating some man with no identity who tried to board a
plane, and see a picture of you."
"Neither do I."
Jack shivered. What a
nightmare. The end of his life in the interstices. But even worse would be
having his picture in the papers and on TV. He'd made a fair number of people
very unhappy during the course of his fix-it career. The only reason he was
still alive was because they didn't know who he was or where to find him. A
very public arrest would change all that. Might as well paint a bull's-eye on
his chest.
While Gia checked theMiami
weather on the computer in the second bedroom, Jack seated himself at the
claw-foot oak table and took out a spare wallet. He removed all traces of other
identities, leaving only the Tyleski license and credit card, then added about
a thousand in cash.
Gia returned from the other
room. "The three-day forecast forMiami is in the nineties, so I'd better
pack you light clothes."
"Fine. Throw in some
running shorts while you're at it." He was dressed in jeans, sneakers, and
a T-shirt now, but he needed something more for the trip. "While you're in
there, pull me out a long-sleeved shirt, will you?"
She made a face.
"Long-sleeved? It's hot."
"I have my
reasons."
She shrugged and disappeared
into his bedroom.
While she was digging
through his drawers, Jack swathed his 9mm Glock 19 in bubble wrap, then wrapped
that in aluminum foil, and shoved it into the FedEx box; he did the same with
his .38 AMT Backup and its ankle holster, then packed in more wrap to keep them
from shifting around in the box. That done he wrapped duct tape around the box
wherever the FedEx logo appeared.
"How many days should I
pack for?" Gia called from the other room.
"Three or four. If I
stay longer I'll have them washed."
Gia popped back into the
front room holding a lightweight cotton shirt with a tight red-and-blue check.
"You sure you want long
sleeves?"
He nodded. "Need them
to hide this."
He held up a plastic dagger.
It was dark green, almost black, with a three-inch blade and a four-inch
handle, all molded from a single piece of super-hard plastic fiber compound
that Abe guaranteed would breeze past any metal detector on earth. The blade
had no cutting edge to speak of, but the point was sharp enough to pierce
plywood.
No one was hijackinghis
flight.
Gia's eyes widened.
"Oh, Jack! You're not really thinking of-"
"I'll have it taped to
the inside of my arm. No one will find it."
"This is insane! Do you
know what will happen to you if you're caught?"
"I won't be." He
held up a roll of adhesive tape. "Help me tape it on?"
"Absolutely not! I'll
have no part in this craziness. It's irresponsible. You have a child on the
way! Do you want to be in jail when she's born?"
"Of course not. But
Gia, you should understand by now, this is the way I am, this is the way I have
to do it."
"You're afraid of
giving up control is what it is."
"Maybe so. Getting on a
plane piloted by someone I don't know puts a crimp in my comfort zone. But I
can handle that. What I can't handle is handing some out-to-lunch airline full
responsibility for making sure that all the other passengers are going to
behave."
"You've got to learn to
trust, Jack."
"I do. I trust me, I
trust you, I trust Abe, I trust Julio. Beyond that..." He shrugged.
"Sorry. It's the way I'm wired." He held up the tape again.
"Please?"
She helped, but he could
tell her heart wasn't in it.
He blunted the point with a
small piece of tape, then held it in place against the inside of his left upper
arm, the butt of the handle almost in his armpit, while she secured it with
three long strips that encircled his arm. Not the most comfortable arrangement,
but he'd remove it in the restroom once they were in the air and transfer the
knife to the inside of one of his socks for the rest of the flight.
When she finished taping she
stepped back and looked at her work.
"That should hold.
I..." She shook her head.
"What?"
"I can't help thinking
that if there'd been someone like you on those 9-11 planes, theTradeTowers
might still be standing."
"Maybe. Maybe not. I'm
not Superman. I can't take on five alone. But along with guys like the ones on
Flight 93, who knows?"
He pulled on the shirt,
rolled the cuffs halfway up his forearms, and struck a pose.
"How do I look?"
"Suspicious," she
said.
"Really?"
She sighed. "No. You
look like you always look: Mister Everyday People."
That was what he wanted to
hear. "Great. Am I packed?"
"I put it all on the
bed. Where's your suitcase?"
"Suitcase? I don't have
one. I've never needed one."
"That's right. You
don't travel. How about a gym bag or something along that line?"
"Yeah, but it's filled
with tools." His kind of tools.
"Well, if it's not too
dirty inside, empty it out and we'll see if it'll do the job."
Jack pulled the bag out of a
closet and emptied its contents on the kitchen counter: glass cutter, suction
cup, rubber mallet, pry bar, slim jim for car doors, lock picks, an assortment
of screwdrivers and clamps in various sizes and configurations.
"What is all
this?" Gia asked as she watched the growing pile.
"Tools of the trade,
m'dear. Tools of the trade."
"If you're a burglar,
maybe."
He wiped out the inside of
the bag with a damp paper towel and handed it to her. "Will this do?"
It did. His wardrobe down
south would consist of shorts, T-shirts, socks, and boxers. They managed to
stuff it all into the bag.
"You're going to look
wrinkled," she warned.
"I'm going toFlorida ,
remember?WrinkleCity ."
"Touché."
He hefted the bag. "Do
I check this or will they let me carry it on board?"
"That looks plenty
small enough for the overhead."
"Overhead...? Oh,
right. I know what you mean."
She looked up at him.
"When was the last time you were on a plane?"
Jack had to think about
that. The answer was a little embarrassing. "I think it was sophomore year
of college. Spring break in Lauderdale."
He barely remembered it.
Seemed like a lifetime ago. In a way it was. A different life.
"Not once since?"
He shrugged. "No place
I want to go."
She stared at him. "Is
that the truth?"
"Of course. Anything I
could ever want is right here in this city."
"You don't think the
fact that flying is so much of a hassle, arisky hassle for you, has anything to
do with it?"
"Maybe some."
Where was this going?
Gia slipped her arms around
him and squeezed, pressing herself against him.
"Don't you see?"
she said. "Don't you see? You've built this anonymous, autonomous life for
yourself, but it's become a trap. Sure, no one knows you exist and you don't
spend the first four or five months of every year working for the government
like the rest of us, and that's great in its way, but it's also a trap.
Everywhere you go you've got to pretend to be someone else and run the risk of
being found out. I go anywhere I want without a second thought. If I go to an
airport and someone scrutinizes my ID, I'm not worried. But you've got the
anxiety that someone will spot a flaw."
She released him and fixed
him with her blue stare.
"Who's freer, Jack?
Really."
She didn't understand. Jack
figured she'd never fully understand. But that was okay. It didn't make him
love her any less, because he knew where she was coming from. She'd been on her
own for years, a single mother trying to make a career for herself and a life
for her child. She had responsibilities beyond herself. Her days, spent dealing
with the nuts and bolts of everyday life, were hectic and exhausting enough
without adding multiple layers of complexity.
"It's not subject to
comparison, Gia. I've lived the way I felt I had to live. By my rules, my code.
My not paying taxes has nothing to do with money, it has to do with life, and
who owns mine, or who owns yours, or Vicky's, or anyone's."
"I understand that, and
philosophically I'm with you all the way. But in the practical, workaday world,
how does that work for a man with a family? 'Oh, I'm sorry, honey. Daddy's not
traveling with us because he's using a false identity and doesn't want us
involved if he's picked up. But don't worry, he'll meet us there. I hope.'
That's no way to bring up a child."
"We couldall have false
identities. We could be an under-the-radar family." He quickly held up his
hands. "Only kidding."
"I hope so. What a
nightmare that would be."
This time he pulled her
close. "I'm working on it, Gi. I'll find a way."
She kissed him. "I know
you will. You're Repairman Jack. You can fix anything."
"I'm glad you think
so."
But coming back from
underground with his freedom intact...that was a tall order.
You'd better come through
for me, Abe, he thought, because I've hit a wall.
He didn't want the hassle of
parking at the airport so he called a cab to take him to LaGuardia. Since Gia
lived in the shadow of the Fifty-ninth Street Bridge, a minimal detour would
allow him to drop her off at home along the way.
"Be careful," she
whispered after a long goodbye kiss. "Come back to me, and don't get into
any trouble down there."
"I'm visiting my
comatose father. How on earth could I possibly get into any trouble?"
8
Jack reached the OmniShuttle Airways counter an hour
before the next scheduled flight.
Before dropping Gia off,
he'd had the cab take him over to Abe's where he left the package to be
overnighted to his father's place. Abe used a small, exclusive, expensive
shipping company that didn't ask questions. The cab ride had been uneventful,
but it felt so odd to be moving about the city without a gun either tucked into
the small of his back or strapped to his ankle. He didn't dare risk trying to
sneak one onto the plane, though, even in checked luggage, now that they were
x-raying every piece.
The ticket purchase went
smoothly: A mocha-skinned woman with an indeterminate accent took the Tyleski
Visa card and the Tyleski driver license, punched a lot of keys-an awful lot of
keys-then handed them back along with a ticket and a boarding pass. Jack had
chosen OmniShuttle because he didn't want any round-trip-ticket hassles. The
airline sold one-way tickets without regard to Saturday stayovers or any of
that other nonsense: When you want to go, buy a ticket; when you want to come
back, buy another.
Jack's kind of company.
He asked for an aisle seat
but they were all already taken. But he did manage to snag an exit row, giving
him more leg room.
He had some time so he
treated himself to a container of coffee with a trendoid name like
mocha-latte-java-kaka-kookoo or something like that; it tasted pretty good. He
bought some gum and then, steeling himself, headed for the metal detectors with
their attendant body inspectors.
He made sure to get on the
end of the longest line, to give him a chance to see how they conducted the
screening process. He noticed that a much higher percentage of the people who
set off the metal alarm were taken aside for more thorough screening than the
ones who didn't. Jack wanted to be in the latter category.
This is how a terrorist must
feel, he realized. Standing on line, sweating, praying that no one sees through
his bogus identity. Except I'm not looking to hurt anyone. I'm just looking to
get toFlorida .
When it came his time, he
placed his bag on the belt and watched as it was swallowed by the maw of the
fluoroscope. Then it was his turn to step through the metal detector. He put
his watch, change, and keys into a little bowl that was passed around the
detector, then stepped through.
His heart skipped a beat and
jumped into high gear when a loud beep sounded. Damn!
"Sir, have you emptied
your pockets?" said a busty bottle-blonde woman in a white shirt with
epaulettes, a gold badge, and a name tag that read "Delores." She was
armed with a metal detecting wand. A dozen feet behind her, two security guards
stood with carbines slung over their shoulders.
"I thought I did. Let
me check again." He patted his pants pockets front and rear but, except
for his wallet, they were empty. He pulled out the wallet. "Could this be
the culprit?"
She waved her wand past it
without a beep. "No, sir. Step over here, please."
"What for?"
"I have to wand
you."
When had "wand"
become a verb?
"Is something
wrong?"
"Probably just your
belt buckle or jewelry. Stand here, back to the table. Good. Now spread your
legs and raise your arms out from your body."
Jack assumed the position.
The moisture deserting his mouth seemed to be migrating to his palms. She waved
the wand up and down the inside and outside of his legs, then across his waist
where she got a beep from his belt buckle-no problem-and then she started on
his arms. Right one first-inside and outside, okay; then the left-outside okay,
but a loud beep as the wand approached his armpit.
Oh shit, oh hell, oh Christ.
Abe you promised me, you swore to me the knife would pass the detectors. What's
happening?
Without moving his head,
Jack checked out the two security guards from the corner of his right eye. They
looked bored, and certainly weren't paying attention to him. To his left a
handful of unarmed security personnel were busy screening-wanding-other
travelers. He could barrel past them and dash back out into the terminal, but
where to go from there? His chances of escaping were nil, he knew, but he damn
well wasn't simply going to stand here and put his hands out for the cuffs. If
they wanted him, they were going to have to catch him.
"Sir?"
"Hmmm? What?" Jack
could feel the sweat breaking out on his forehead. Had she noticed?
"I said, do you have
anything in your breast pocket?"
"My-?"
He jammed his hand into the
pocket and came out with his package of Dentyne Ice. Gum in a blister
pack...sealed with foil...
She ran her wand over it and
was rewarded with a beep. She took the pack, opened it to make sure it was only
gum, then dropped it on the table. The rest of the wanding was beepless.
The future that had been
telescoping closed at warp-10 now opened wide again. Feeling as giddy as a man
with a reprieve from death row, Jack retrieved his watch, keys, and chain, but
he left the damn gum. It had put him on a train to heart attack city. Let
Delores have it.
As he hefted his gym bag
strap onto his shoulder he fought an urge to ask Delores if she wanted to
inspect that too. Inspect anything you want! The mad inspectee strikes again!
But he said nothing,
contenting himself with a friendly nod as he started toward his gate. He
reached it with just enough time to put in a quick to call Gia.
"I made it," he
said when she answered. "I board the plane in a couple of minutes."
"Thank God! Now I won't
have to figure out how to bake a cake with a file inside."
"Well, there's still
the flight home."
"Let's not think about
that yet. Call me when you've seen your father, and let me know how he
is."
"Will do. Love
ya."
"Love you too, Jack.
Very much. Just be careful. Don't talk to strangers or go riding in strange
cars, or take candy from-"
"Gotta run."
He wound up in a window seat
in the left emergency row with the perfect traveling companion: The guy fell
asleep before takeoff and didn't wake up until they were on theMiami tarmac. No
small talk and Jack got to eat the guy's complimentary bag of peanuts.
The only glitch in the trip
was a slight westward alteration of the usual flight path due to tropical storm
Elvis. Elvis...when Jack had heard the name announced on TV the other night
he'd done a double take that would have put Lou Costello to shame.
He wondered now if there'd
ever been a tropical storm named Eliot. If so, had it been designated on the
maps as T. S. Eliot?
Elvis was not expected to
graduate to hurricane status, but was presently off the coast nearJacksonville
, cruising landward and stirring things up, just as its namesake had in the
fifties. Though the plane swung westward to avoid the turbulence, Jack could
see the storm churning away to the east. From his high perch he looked out over
the rugged terrain of cloud tops broken dramatically here and there by fluffy
white buttes from violent updrafts. Elvis was entering the building.
9
"Don't let her bite me, Semelee!" Corley cried.
Semelee lifted the shells
away from her eyes and looked at Corley.
Corley's good eye, the one
he could open, rolled in its socket under his bulging forehead as he looked up
at her from where he stood waist deep in the lagoon. Normally at that spot in
the lagoon the water'd be up to his neck. But with this drought...
Corley was hard on the eyes,
that was for sure, but that made him good for beggin. They'd take him to town,
sit him in a shady spot on the sidewalk, put a beat-up old hat in front of him,
and wait. That hat wouldn't stay empty for long. People'd take one look at that
face and empty their pockets of all their spare change, even toss in a few
bills now and then.
But Tuesdays weren't no good
for beggin-not as bad as Mondays, but bad. So Mondays and Tuesdays became
fishin days.
"Tell her not to
bite!" Corley wailed.
"Hesh up and hold the
net," Luke told him.
Semelee smiled as she
watched the two clansmen from the deck of the second, smaller houseboat,
theHorse-ship . They stood in the water beside the boat, each holdin a
four-foot pole with a net of half-inch nylon mesh stretched between them.
Twisted trees with tortured trunks on the bank leaned over the water.
Luke was Corley's half
brother, and he was special too. Not in ways you could see so plain like
Corley's, and not in ways that was much good on the beggin front. So he mostly
just ferried the beggin folk around. But Luke was special in his own way. Maybe
too special. He'd tried the beggin thing, takin off his shirt to show the
little fins runnin down his spine and all the big scales that covered his back,
but he was a flop. Didn't collect a dime. People was heard to say it looked
fake, that no one could really have a back that ugly, and wouldn't drop a dime.
The cops tried to arrest him for public disgustation or somethin like that, but
he run off before they could catch him.
Semelee was glad she wasn't
misshapen like Corley or Luke or the other members of the clan. But she was
special too. She had a weird look that had been enough to bring her a lot of
pain, but not weird enough to bring in loose change. She was special in another
way. In her own way. Special on the inside.
"Ain't like this is the
first time you ever done this," she told Corley.
"I know, but I hate it.
If'n I do it a million times I'm still gonna hate it. That thing could take my
leg off with one bite if it got a mind to."
"Not just one leg,
Corley," Luke said with a grin. "When you think about it, she could
take both off at once-if she got a mind to, that is."
"Or if I got tired of
your whining and told her to," Semelee added.
"That ain't
funny!" Corley said, dancing in place like a little boy who had to take a
wizz.
"Stand still!"
Luke said. "We're tryin to catch fish, not scare 'em away! Just be glad it
ain't Devil doin the herdin."
Corley's hands shook.
"If'n it was Devil, I wouldn't be in the water! Hell, I wouldn't even be
on the bank!"
Semelee spotted a dark
shape, maybe a foot or two deep, slidin through the water toward them, rippling
the surface above as it moved.
Dora was comin, drivin the
fish before her.
"Get ready," she
told them. "Here we go."
Corley let out a soft,
high-pitched moan of fear but held his ground and his end of the net.
The shape glided closer and
closer to Luke and Corley, and then suddenly the net bowed backward and the
water between them was alive with fish, frothing the surface as they thrashed
against the net. The two men pushed their poles together and lifted the net out
of the water. A coupla dozen or more good-size mollies and even a few bass
wiggled in the mesh.
"Fish fry
tonight!" Luke cried.
"She touched me!"
Corley said, looking this way and that. If his neck would've allowed it, it'd
be swivelin round in circles. "She tried to bite me!"
"That was just her
flipper," Luke said.
"I don't care! Let's
get these things ashore!"
"Don't forget to leave
me some," Semelee said. "Dora'll be very unhappy if you don't."
"Oh, right!
Right!" Corley said. He reached into the net and pulled out a wriggling
six-inch molly. "The usual?"
"A couple should
do."
He flipped one and then
another onto the deck, then headed for shore.
Semelee picked up one of the
flopping, gasping fish and held it by its slick, slippery tail over the water.
"Dora," she
sing-songed. "Dora, dear. Where are you, baby?"
Dora must have been waitin
on the bottom because she popped to the surface right away. The snapping
turtle's mountainous shell with its algae-and grass-covered peaks and valleys
appeared first, runnin a good three-four feet stem to stern. Then her heads
broke the surface, all four beady little eyes fixed on her, both hooked jaws
open and waitin. Semelee could see the little wormlike growth on each of her
tongues that Dora used like fishin lures when she sat on the bottom during the
daytime and waited for lunch. Finally the long tail broke the surface and
floated behind her like a big fat water moccasin.
Semelee was sure scientists
would give anything for a look at Dora, the biggest, damnedest,
weirdest-looking alligator snapper anyone had ever seen, but she was Semelee's,
and no one else was gettin near her.
She tossed a fish at the
left head. The sharp, powerful jaws snapped closed across the center, severing
the head and tail. The right head snatched those up as they hit the water. A
pair of convulsive swallows and the mouths were open again.
Semelee gave the right head
first crack at the second fish, with similar results, then she stretched her
hands out over the water. Dora reared up so that her heads came in reach.
"Good girl, Dora,"
she cooed, stroking the tops of the heads. Dora's long tail thrashed back and
forth with pleasure. "Thanks for your help. Better get outta sight now
before the dredgers come."
Dora gave her one last look
before sinkin from sight.
As Semelee straightened she
caught a glimpse of her reflection in the churned-up water and took another peek.
She didn't hold much with mirror gazin, but every once in a while she took a
look at herself and wondered how different things mighta been for her if she'd
had a head of normal hair-black or brown or red or blond, didn't matter, just
so long as it wasn't what she'd been born with.
The surface of the water
showed someone in her mid-twenties with a face that wasn't no head turner but
not ugly neither. If heads did turn, it was cause of her hair, a tangled
silver-white mane that trailed after her like a cloud-a very tangled, twisted
stormy cloud that no amount of combin or brushin could straighten. No amount at
all. She should know. She'd spent enough hours as a kid workin on it.
That hair had been a curse
for as long as she could recall. She didn't remember bein born here, right here
on the lagoon, and didn't remember her momma leavin the lagoon and takin her
toTallahassee . But she did remember grammar school inTallahassee . Did she
ever.
Her earliest memories there
was of kids pointin to her hair and callin her "Old Lady." Nobody
wanted Old Lady Semelee on their team no matter what they was playin, so she
used to spend recesses and after school mostly alone. Mostly. Being left out
would have been bad enough, but the other girls couldn't let it go at that. No,
they had to crowd around her and pull off the hat she wore to hide her hair,
then they'd yank on that hair and make fun of it. The days she came home from
school cryin to her momma were beyond countin. Home was her safe place, the only
safe place, and her momma was her only friend.
Semelee remembered how she'd
cursed her hair. If not for that hair she wouldn't be teased, she'd be allowed
into the other kids' games, she'd have friends-more than anything else in the
world little Semelee wanted a friend, just one lousy friend. Was that too much
to ask? If not for that hair she'dbelong . And little Semelee so wanted to
belong.
Since hats wasn't helpin,
she decided one day at age seven to cut it all off. She took out her momma's
sewin scissors and started choppin. Semelee smiled now at the memory of the
mess she'd made of it, but it hadn't been funny then. Her momma'd screamed when
she seen it. She was fit to be tied and that scared Semelee, scared her bad.
Her only friend was mad.
Momma took the scissors and
tried to make somethin outta the chopped-up thatch but she couldn't do much.
And the kids at school only
laughed all the harder when they saw it.
But they ain't laughin now,
Semelee thought with grim satisfaction as she threaded the holes in the
eye-shells through the slim leather thong she wore around her neck. At least
some of them ain't. Some of them'll never laugh again.
She watched the ripples and
eddies that remained behind on the surface in Dora's wake. Something about
their crisscrossing pattern reminded her of her dream last night, the one about
someone coming from someplace far away. As she watched the water she had a
flash of insight. Suddenly she knew.
"He's here."
10
Miami International had been a mob scene, far more hectic
and crowded than LaGuardia. Jack wound his way through the horde of arrivees
and departees toward the ground transportation area. There he caught a shuttle
bus toRent-a-CarLand . In order to help them out of second place, Jack decided
to rent from Avis. He settled on an "intermediate" car and chose the
most anonymous looking vehicle they had: a beige Buick Century.
The hospital had given him
directions from the Florida Turnpike but Jack choseUS 1 instead. He figured it
would take longer. The red-vested guy at the Avis desk gave him a map and
highlighted the way to Route 1.
He was on his way.
All around himSouth Florida
lay flat as a tabletop under a merciless sun, bright in a cloud-dappled sky,
blazing through a haze of humidity that hugged the land. Someone somewhere had
calledFlorida an oversized sandbar hanging off the continent like a vestigial
limb. Jack couldn't see anything to contradict that.
He'd expected more lushness,
but the fronds of the palms along the side of the road hung limp and dull atop
their trunks, their tips a dirty gray-brown. The grass and brush around them
looked burned out. No doubt the result of the drought Abe had mentioned.
He reached Route 1-also
known asDixie Highway according to the signs-and ran into some traffic at the
southbound merge. People rubber-necking an accident on the northbound side
slowed him for a while. He saw the strobing police and ambulance lights and
felt a flash of resentment, wondering if people had rubbernecked his father's
accident like these yokels.
As soon as they passed the
crash, the road speeded up again.
For a while the view along
US 1 threatened to devolve into Anytown, USA-at least an Anytown warm enough
for palm trees-with a parade of Denny's and Wendy's and McDonalds, and
Blockbusters and Chevrons and Texacos. Further proof of the depressing
homogenization ofAmerica , its terror of the untried, its angst of the unique.
But then he started noticing
taquerias and tapas joints, and billboards in Spanish. The Cubano and Mexican
influence. He passed a place offering "fishes." Okay, this wasn't
Anytown. This had a flavor all its own.
The colors of the buildings
struck him between the eyes. Standard granite gray had been banished. The
palette here was way heavy on the pastels, especially turquoise and coral. The
buildings looked like molded sherbet-orange, raspberry, key lime, lemon,
watermelon, casaba, and maybe a few as yet untried flavors. He spotted a mall
done up in what might be called rotten-lemon-rind yellow.
Further south he passed one
car dealership after another, every make from every nation that exported cars,
all interspersed with AutoZones and Midas Mufflers,GoodyearTireCenters , and
dozens of no-name auto parts shops. People must be nuts about cars down here.
He realized he was hungry.
He saw a place called Joanie's Blue Crab Café and pulled off the road. The
place was pretty much empty-this was off-season, after all-and decorated with
local crafts. Paintings by local artists studded the wall. The other three
patrons were glued to the TV where the Weather Channel was showing green,
yellow, and orange swirls that were supposed to be tropical storm Elvis. They
were asking when the hell they were going to get rain.
An air conditioner or two
might have expanded the comfort zone in Joanie's, but that would have detracted
from the funkyFlorida ambiance. Jack hung in there under the twirling ceiling
fans and asked the waitress for a local brew. She brought him something called
Ybor Gold and it tasted so damn good he had another along with a crabcake
sandwich that was out of this world. This lady could open on theUpper East Side
and clean up.
Belly full, Jack stepped
outside. Elvis might be dumping tons of water onJacksonville and the rest of
northFlorida , but down here, though the sky was speckled with clouds, none of
them looked like the raining kind. The forecast was bone dry. Dry at least as
far as precipitation went, but the air itself lay thick with humidity and clung
to his skin like a sloppy wet kiss from a least-favorite aunt.
Back in the car he searched
around the radio dial for some music- rock, preferably-but all he found was
country or folks speaking Spanish or sweaty-voiced preachers shouting
aboutJay-sus .
If you want to believe
inJay-sus , he thought, fine. If you want me to believe inJay-sus , fine too;
you can want anything you wish. But do you have to shout?
He finally found a rock
station but it was playing Lou Reed. He quick-hitSCAN . Through the years Jack
had come to the conclusion that Lou Reed was a brilliant performance artist
whose act was a lifelong portrayal of a singer-songwriter who couldn't carry a
tune or write a melody.
The tuner stopped on a dance
station. Jack didn't dance, the beat was monotonous, and he'd arrived in the
middle of a woman doing a double-time version of "Boys of Summer." He
bailed when a cheesy organ attempted to duplicate Kootch Kortchmar's riffs from
the original. What had Don Henley ever done to deserve that?
Next stop, one of the
country stations-"Gator Country One-Oh-One Point Nine!" He liked some
country, mostly the Hank Williams-Senior, preferably-Buck Owens, Mel Tillis
brand of mournful nobody-loves-me-but-my-dog-and-he's-got-fleas-so-pass-that-whiskey-bottle-over-here-if-you-please
ballad. He lasted maybe fifteen minutes on 101.9. Three songs, three singers,
and they all sounded exactly the same. Was that the awful truth about modern
country music? The one they'd kill to keep? One lead singer performing under a
gazillion different names? Jack wasn't sure about that part, but he had no
doubt that the same guy had been singing backup harmony on all three songs.
Okay. Can the radio.
He saw a sign for Novaton
and hung a right off US 1 onto a road that ran due west, straight as a latitude
line. Looked like someone had given a guy a compass and a paver filled with
asphalt and said, "Go west, young man! Go west!" It made sense. No
hills or valleys to skirt. The only rises in the road he'd seen since leaving
the airport had been overpasses.
He checked out the sickly
palms and pines flanking the road. He'd worked with a landscaper as a teen and
knew northeast greenery, but even healthy these trees would be a mystery to
him. Dead gray fronds lay on the shoulder like roadkill while some skittered
onto the pavement when the breeze caught them.
All the houses along the
road were squat little ranches in overgrown yards, with carports instead of
garages; they hunkered against the earth as if hiding from something. Every
once in a while a warehouse would soar to one-and-a-half stories, but that was
an aberration. The favored exterior shade seemed to be a sick green like
oxidized copper, and here and there a pizza-size DTV dish would poke up from a
roof. He'd been expecting lots of red-tile roofs but they seemed a rarity; most
were standard asbestos shingles, pretty threadbare in many cases. Oddly, the
shabbiest houses seemed to sport the most magnificent palms in their front
yards.
Even if he didn't know much
about tropical or subtropical trees, he did know banyans; their distinctive
aerial roots gave them away. The road to Novaton was loaded with them. In some
stretches banyan phalanxes lined each side of the street and interwove their
branches above the pavement, transforming a bumpy secondary road into a
wondrous, leafy green tunnel.
He recognized a couple of
coconut palms, only because of the yellowing nuts hanging among the fronds.
Plants that inNew York grew only indoors in carefully watered and fertilized
pots flourished like weeds down here.
He passed a tall white water
tower emblazoned with the town name and shaped like one of those old WWI
potato-masher hand grenades the Germans used to toss at the Allies. At its base
lay a dusty soccer field flanked by a high school, a middle school, and a
senior center.
He passed a feed store. Feed
what? He hadn't seen any cattle.
Abruptly he was in Novaton
and quickly found the center of town-the whole four square blocks of it. The
directions from the hospital told him how to find it from there. Two right
turns offMain Street and he came to a three-story cantaloupe-colored brick
building of reasonable vintage. The sign out front told him he'd reached his
destination.
NOVATONCOMMUNITYHOSPITAL
A MEMBER OFDADECOUNTY MEDICAL SYSTEMS
He parked in a corner of the
visitor lot next to some sad looking cacti and headed through the stifling
late-afternoon heat toward the front door. An arthritic old man in the
information kiosk gave him his father's room number on the third floor.
Minutes later Jack was
standing outside room 375. The door stood open. He could see the foot of the
bed, the twin tents of the patient's feet under the sheet. The rest was
obscured by a privacy curtain. He sensed no movement in the room, no one there
besides the patient.
The patient...his
father...Dad.
Jack hesitated, advancing
one foot across the threshold, then drawing it back.
What am I afraid of?
He knew. He'd been putting
this off-not only his arrival, but thinking about this moment as well-since
he'd started the trip. He didn't want to see his father, his only surviving
parent, laid out like a corpse. Alive sure, but only in the bodily sense. The
man inside, the sharp-though-nerdy-middle-class mind, the lover of gin, sticky-sweet
desserts, bad puns, and ugly Hawaiian shirts, was unavailable, walled off, on
hold, maybe forever. He didn't want to see him like that.
Yeah, well that's just too
damn bad for me, isn't it, he thought as he stepped into the room and marched
to the foot of the bed. And stared.
Jeez, what happened to him?
Did he shrink?
He'd expected bruises and
they were there in abundance: a bandage on the left side of his head, a purple
goose egg on his forehead, and a pair of black eyes. What shocked him was how
small his father looked in that bed. He'd never been a big man, maintaining a
lean and rangy build even through middle age, but now he looked so flat and
frail, like a miniature, two-dimensional caricature tucked into a bed-shaped envelope.
Besides the IV bag hanging
over the bed, running into him, another bag hung below the mattress, catching
the urine coming out of him. Spikes marched in an even progression along the
glowing line on the cardiac monitor.
Maybe this wasn't him. Jack
looked for familiar features. He couldn't see much of the mouth as it hung open
behind the transparent green plastic of the oxygen mask. The skin was tanned
more deeply than he'd ever remembered, but he recognized the age spots on his
forehead, and the retreating gray hairline. His blue eyes were hidden behind
closed lids, and his steel-rimmed glasses-the only time his father took off his
glasses was to sleep, shower, or trade them for prescription sunglasses-were
gone.
But yeah, this was him.
Jack felt acutely
uncomfortable standing here, staring at his father. So helpless...
They'd seen very little of
each other in the past fifteen years, and when they had, it was all Dad's
doing. His earliest memories of home were ones of playing catch in the backyard
when he'd been all of five years old and the mitt was half the size of his
torso, standing in a circle with his father and sister Kate and brother Tom,
tossing the ball back and forth. Dad and Kate would underhand it to him so he
could catch it; Tom always tried to make him miss.
His lasting, growing-up
impressions were of a slim, quiet man who rarely raised his voice, but when he
did, you listened; who rarely raised his hand, but when he did, a single, quick
whack on the butt made you see the error of your ways. He'd worked as a CPA for
Arthur Anderson, then moved-decades before the Enron scandal-to Price
Waterhouse where he stayed until retirement.
He wasn't a showy sort,
never the life of the party, never had a flashy car-he liked Chevys-and never
moved from the westJersey house he and Mom had bought in the mid-fifties. Then,
without warning, he'd up and sold it last fall and moved toFlorida . He was a
middle-class man with a middle-class income and middle-class mores. He hadn't
changed history and no one but the surviving members of his family and steadily
diminishing circle of old friends would note or mourn his passing, yet Jack
would remember him as a man who always could, as Joel McCrea had put it inRide
the High Country , enter his house justified.
Jack stepped around to the
left side of the bed, the one opposite the IV pole. He pulled up a chair, sat,
and took his father's hand. He listened to his breathing, slow and even. He felt
he should say something but didn't know what. He'd heard that some people in
comas can hear what's going on around them. It didn't make much sense, but it
couldn't hurt to try.
"Hey, Dad. It's me.
Jack. If you can hear me, squeeze my hand, or move a finger. I-"
His father said something
that sounded like "Brashee!" The word startled Jack.
"What'd you say, Dad?
What'd you say?"
He caught movement out of
the corner of his eye and saw a heavyset young woman in a white coat enter with
a clipboard in her hand. She had a squat body, café au lait skin, short dark
hair; a stethoscope was draped around her neck.
"Are you a
relative?" she said.
"I'm his son. Are you
his nurse?"
She smiled briefly-very
briefly. "No, I'm his doctor." She put out her hand. "Dr.
Huerta. I was the neurologist on call when your father was brought to the ED
last night."
Jack shook her hand.
"Jack. Just call me Jack." He pointed to his father. "He just
spoke!"
"Really? What did he
say?"
"Sounded like
'brashee.'"
"Does that mean
anything to you?"
"No."
And then he thought, Maybe
he heard my voice and was trying to say,Black sheep.
"He's been vocalizing
gibberish. It's not unusual in his state."
He studied Dr. Huerta for a
few seconds. She didn't look old enough to be in med school, let alone a
specialist.
"Whatis his state?
How's he doing?"
"Not as well as we'd
like. His coma score is seven."
"Out of ten?"
She shook her head. "We
use the Glasgow Coma Score here. The lowest, or worst score, is three. That's
deep coma. The best is fifteen. We go by eyes, verbalization, and movement.
Your father scores a one on his eyes-they remain closed at all times-and a two
on vocalization, which means he makes meaningless sounds like you just heard
now and then."
"That's a total of
three," Jack said.
This wasn't sounding too
good.
"But his motor response
is a four, meaning he withdraws from painful stimuli."
"What kind of painful
stimuli? I won't be finding cigarette burns on his soles, will I?"
Dr. Huerta's eyes widened.
"Good heavens, no! What on earth do you think-?"
"Sorry, sorry."
Jeez, lady. Chill. "Just kidding."
"I should hope
so," she said with an annoyed look. "We use a special pin to test
motor responses. Your father's score of four brings his total to seven. Not
great, but it could be worse." She checked her clip board. "His
reflexes, however, are intact, his vitals are good, so are his labs. His brain
MRI showed no stroke or subdural hemorrhage, and his LP was negative for
blood."
"LP?"
"Lumbar puncture.
Spinal tap."
"No blood. That's good,
right?"
She nodded. "No signs
of intracranial bleeding. His heart's been acting up, though."
"Whoa," Jack said,
jolted by the remark. "His heart? He's always had a good heart."
"Well, he went into
atrial fibrillation last night-that's a chaotically irregular heartbeat-and
again this morning. I called for a cardiology consult and Dr. Reston saw him.
Both times your father converted back to normal rhythm spontaneously, but it
does indicate some level of heart disease."
"How bad is this atrial
fibrillation?"
"The main worry is a
clot forming in the left atrium and shooting up to the brain and causing a
stroke."
"Swell," Jack
said. "As if a coma isn't bad enough."
"Dr. Reston started him
on a blood thinner to prevent that. But tell me about his medical history. I've
been working in the dark, knowing nothing about him beyond the address and date
of birth we got off his license. Has he been treated for any illnesses or heart
problems in the past? Does he take any medications?"
"I think he once
mentioned taking an aspirin a day, but beyond that..."
"Do you know if he's
been seeing a doctor down here, for checkups and the like?"
Jack was embarrassed. He
knew no more about what his father had been doing down here than what he'd been
doing inJersey before the move. He knew his father's new address but had never
seen the place. Truth was, he knew nothing about his father's life down here or
anywhere else, and even less about his health.
But he was getting a crash
course this afternoon.
How to put this...
"He wasn't much for
talking to me about his health."
Dr. Huerta smiled.
"That's a switch. Most people his age talk about nothing but."
"Is he going to be
okay?"
"I wish I could say. If
his cardiac rhythm stabilizes, I believe he'll come out of this with little
permanent damage. He won't remember a thing about the accident, but-"
"What about the
accident?" Jack said. "What happened?"
She shrugged. "I have
no idea. All I know is that he was brought in unconscious from head trauma.
You'll have to ask the police."
The police...swell. The last
people Jack wanted to talk to.
She fished in her pocket.
"I'll be looking in on him again in the morning. If you learn anything
about his medical history, give me a call." She handed him a card.
Jack slipped it into his
pocket.
11
After the doctor bustled out of the room, Jack turned back
to his father. As he stepped toward the bed-
"So, you're one of
Thomas's sons."
Jack jumped at the sound of
the voice, raspy, like someone who'd been gargling with kerosene. Startled
because he hadn't heard anyone come in, he looked around and found the room
empty.
"Who-?"
"Over here,
honey."
The voice came from behind
the curtain. Jack reached out and pulled it back. A thin, flat-chested old
woman sat in a chair in a shadowed corner. Her black hair was pulled back in a
tight bun and her skin was dark, made even darker by the sleeveless canary
yellow blouse and bright pink Bermuda shorts she wore, but in the shadows he
couldn't tell her race. A large straw shopping bag sat on the floor beside her.
"When did you come
in?"
"I've been here the
whole time." She pronounced it "Oy've been here the whole toym."
The accent was from somewhere on Long Island-Lynn Samuels to the Nth degree.
But that cinderblock-dragging-behind-a-truck voice...how many packs of
cigarettes had it taken to achieve that tone?
"Since before I came
in?"
She nodded.
That bothered Jack. He
wasn't usually so careless. He'd have sworn the room was empty.
"You know my
father?"
"Thomas and I are
next-door neighbors. We moved in the same time and became friends. He's never
mentioned me?"
"We, um, don't talk a
lot."
"He's mentioned you,
many times."
"You must be thinking
of Tom."
She shook her head and spoke
at jackhammer speed. "You don't look old enough to be Tom, Jr. You must be
Jack. And he did talk about you. Hell, sometimes I couldn't get him to shut up
about you." She rose and stepped forward, extending a gnarled hand. "I'm
Anya."
Jack took her hand. He saw
now that she was white-or maybe Caucasian was a better term, because she was
anything but white. Her skin was deeply tanned and had that leathery quality
that only decades of dedicated sunbathing can give. Her skinny arms and legs
had the shape and texture of Slim Jims. Her hair was mostly jet black except
for a mist of gray roots hugging her scalp.
Jack heard a faint yip from
behind her. He looked and saw a tiny dog head with huge dark eyes poking over the
edge of the straw shopping bag.
"That's Oyving,"
she said. "Say hello, Oyv."
TheChihuahua yipped again.
"Oyving? How do you
spell that?" Jack said.
She looked at him.
"I-R-V-I-N-G. How else would you spell it?"
He released her hand.
"Oyving it is. I didn't know they allowed dogs in hospitals."
"They don't. But Oyv's
a good dog. He knows how to behave. What they don't know won't hurt them. And
if they find out, fuck 'em."
Jack laughed at the unexpected
expletive. This didn't seem like the kind of woman his father would hang out
with-she couldn't be more unlike his mother-but he liked her.
He told her so.
Her bright dark eyes fixed
on him as she smiled, revealing too-bright teeth that were obviously caps.
"Yeah, well, I'll
probably like you too if you hang around long enough for me to get to know
you." She turned back to the bed. "I do like your father. I've been
sitting with him for most of the day."
Jack was touched. "That's
very kind of you."
"That's what friends
are for, hon. The benison of a neighbor like your father you don't take for
granted."
Benison? He'd have to look
that up.
He cleared his throat.
"So...he's mentioned me?"
Jack was curious how his
father had depicted him but didn't want to ask.
He didn't have to.
"He speaks of all his
children. He loves you all. I remember how he cried when he heard about your
sister. A terrible thing, to outlive a child. But he speaks of you the
most."
"Really?" That
surprised Jack.
She smiled. "Perhaps
because you so vex him."
Vex...another word you don't
hear every day.
"Yeah, I guess I do
that." In spades.
"I don't think he
understands you. He wants to know you but he can't get near enough to find out
who you are."
"Yeah, well..."
Jack didn't know what to
say. This conversation was sidling into uncomfortable territory.
"But he loves you
anyway and worries about you." Her eyes bored into his. "Sad, isn't
it: The father doesn't know his son, and the son doesn't know his father."
"Oh, I know my
father."
"You may think you do,
hon," she said with a slow shake of her head, "but you don't."
Jack opened his mouth to
correct her-no way this woman who'd met Dad less than a year ago could know
more about the man he'd grown up with-but she held up a hand to cut him off.
"Trust me, kiddo,
there's more to your father than you ever dreamed. While you're here, maybe you
should try to get to know him better. Don't miss this opportunity."
Jack glanced at the still
form pressed between the hospital sheets. "Maybe I already have."
She waved a dismissive hand
at the bed. "Thomas will be fine. He's too tough for a little bump on the
head to put him down."
More than a little bump on
the head, Jack thought.
"The doctors don't seem
to think so."
"Doctors." Another
dismissive flip of her hand. "What do they know? Most of them have their
heads up theirtuchuses . Listen to Anya. Anya knows. And Anya says your
father's going to be fine."
Foyn?Jack thought, taking on
her accent. He's gonna befoyn because you say so, lady? Let's hope so.
She looked up at him.
"Where are you staying tonight?"
"Not sure. Passed a
Motel 6 on the way-"
"Nonsense. You'll stay
at your father's place."
"I...I don't think
so."
"Don't argue with Anya.
He'd want you to. He'd be very upset if you didn't."
"I don't have a key. I
don't even know how to get there."
"I'll show you."
She walked over to the bed
and took his father's hand. "Jack and I are going now, Thomas. You rest.
We'll be back tomorrow." Then she turned to Jack and said, "Let's go.
Where's your car?"
"In the lot. Where's
yours?"
"Oh, I don't drive.
Trust me, hon, you wouldn't want to be on the same road as me. You're taking me
and Oyv home."
12
As soon as Anya got in the car she placed Oyv on her lap
and lit up an unfilteredPall Mall .
"Mind if I smoke?"
A little late to object now,
Jack thought.
"Nah. Go ahead."
He lowered all the windows.
"Want one?"
"Thanks, no. Tried it a
few times but never picked up the habit."
"Too bad," Anya
said, blowing a stream out the window. "And if you're going to tell me to
stop, save your breath."
"Wouldn't think of it.
It's your life."
"Damn right. Over the
years I've had five doctors tell me to stop. I've outlived every one of
them."
"Now I definitely won't
say a word."
She smiled and nodded and
directed Jack onto a road leading west of town.
The sinking sun knifed
through his dark glasses and stabbed at his eyes as he drove westward. He
watched what passed for civilization in these parts fall away behind them. The
land became progressively swampier, yet somehow managed to retain that burnt-out
look.
They passed a freshly tilled
field of rich brown earth and wondered what had been growing there all summer.
Most of the cultivation seemed given over to palm tree nurseries. Odd to pass
successive acre plots, each packed with successively larger palms, all of equal
height within their own acre.
Anya pointed a crooked
finger at a twin-engine outboard motorboat in someone's front yard.
"'For Sale By
Owner'?" she said. "I should hope so. Who else would be selling it?
Do they make 'For Sale By Thief' signs?"
A few turns later, past
stands of scrub pines, they came to a block of concrete with a
blue-and-white-tiled mosaic across its front.
GATEWAYS SOUTH
GATEWAY TO THE FINEST IN MATURE LIFESTYLES
The droopy plants and palms
framing the sign looked like they were on their last legs.
"Here we are,"
Anya said. "Home sweet home."
"This is it? This is
where he lives?"
"Where I live too. Turn
already or you'll miss it."
Jack complied and followed a
winding path past a muddy pit with a metal pipe standing in its center.
"That used to be a pond
with a fountain," Anya said. "It was beautiful."
All of Gateways South must
have been beautiful when it was green, but it looked like it had been
particularly hard hit by the drought. All the grass lining the road had been
burned to a uniform beige. Only the pines- which probably pre-dated the community-seemed
to be holding their own.
They came to a checkpoint
divided intoVISITORS andRESIDENT arches, each blocked with a
red-and-white-striped crossarm. Jack began to angle left toward the visitor
gate where a guard sat in an air-conditioned kiosk.
"No," Anya said,
handing him a plastic card. "Use this at the other gate. Just wave it in
front of the whatchamacall it."
The whatchamacall it turned
out to be a little metal box atop a curved pole. Jack waved the card before the
sensor and the striped crossarm went up.
"I feel like I'm
entering some sort of CIA installation," he said. "Or crossing a
border."
"Welcome to one of the
retirement Balkans. Seriously though, as we all get on in our years, and become
more frail than we like to admit, sometimes this is what it takes to let us
feel secure when we turn out the lights."
"Well, as the song
says, whatever gets you through the night. But I can't see this place as much
of a crime risk. It's in the middle of nowhere."
"Which is exactly why
we like a security force guarding the gate and patrolling the grounds."
She pointed straight ahead. "Just take this road to its end."
Jack shook his head as he
followed the asphalt path that wound past what looked like a par-three golf
course. The grass was sparse and brown and the ground looked rock hard. That
wasn't deterring the hardcore hackers; he spotted half a dozen golf carts
bouncing along the fairways.
"Can't they even water
the greens?"
Anya shook her head.
"Drought emergency restrictions. No watering at all inSouth Florida now,
even if you have your own well."
He drove on, passing tennis
courts-at least their Har-Tru surfaces were still green-and shuffleboard areas,
all busy.
"There's the assisted
living facility," she said, pointing to a three-story building done up in
coral shades. Then she pointed to a one-story structure. "That's the
nursing home."
"I don't get it."
"The drought?"
"No. Why my father
moved down here."
"Warmth is a factor.
You get old, you feel the cold. But the main reason people come to Gateways and
other places like it is so they'll never be a burden on their children."
"You talk like you're
not one of them."
"I don't have anybody to
burden, hon. I'm here for the sun." She held up an arm to show off her
wafer-thin, beef-jerky skin. "As you can tell, I love to sit and soak up
the rays. I used to sunbathe in the nude when I was younger. If I didn't know
how the community board would squawk, I'd do it now."
Jack tried not to picture
that.
"But I can't see my
father being a burden on anyone."
"Maybe you don't,
kiddo, buthe can. That's why he's here instead of in some West Palm
condo."
"I'm not following
you."
"Gateways South-and
North and East, for that matter-is a graduated care community that provides for
us through the final stages of our lives. We start off in our own little
bungalows; when we become more frail we move to assisted living where we have a
suite and they provide meals and housekeeping services; and when we can no
longer care for ourselves, we move into the nursing home."
"All it takes is money,
I suppose."
She snorted a puff of smoke
out her nose. "It's not cheap, I can tell you that. You buy your house,
you buy a bond, you pay monthly maintenance fees, but your future care is
assured. That's important."
"Important enough to
hide yourself away down here?"
She shrugged and lit another
cigarette-her third since leaving the hospital. "I'm just telling you what
I've heard my neighbors say. Me, I'm here because I've got no one to care for
me when I start losing it. But the rest, they're all terrified of ending up in
diapers in a son or daughter's home."
"Some children might
not see that as a burden."
"But what of the
parents? They don't want to be remembered like that. Would you?"
"No, I guess not. Iknow
not."
He didn't even want to
remember his father as that flattened man pressed between the hospital sheets
today. He wanted even less to remember him as an empty-eyed drooler in diapers,
a lifetime's store of dignity vanishing like a gambler's paycheck.
He said, "Getting old
sucks, doesn't it."
"For some, yes, but not
all. The body begins to remind you in ways big and small that you ain't
themaidel orboychick you used to be, but you find ways to adjust. It's largely
a matter of acceptance." She pointed to the right. "Turn here."
Jack saw a sign forWhite
Ibis Lane as he made the turn. At the end of the short road stood two small,
identical houses. The four parking spots in the little cul-de-sac were empty.
Jack pulled into one and stepped out of the car. Anya opened her door and let
Oyv hop to the ground. TheChihuahua immediately trotted to the nearest palm and
let loose a tiny yellow stream against its trunk.
Jack smiled. "That tree
looks so dry, I bet it's grateful even for that."
Anya laughed as she
straightened slowly from the passenger seat to a standing position. "You'd
win. Take a look around while I go in and get the key to your father's
place."
Jack felt his eyebrows jump.
"He gave you a key?"
She waved a hand at him and
laughed. "Nothing like that, kiddo. We traded keys as a precaution. In
case of, you know, an emergency."
Jack couldn't resist. He
winked at her. "You're sure that's all?"
"What? Thomas with an
old skinny-assed crone like me when he has all those other women chasing him?
Don't be silly."
Jack held up a hand.
"Whoa. Rewind that. My father's got women chasing him?"
"Like vultures, they
circle. Let me tell you, Thomas could have his pick of scores-scores."
Jack had to laugh. "I
don't believe this. My father, the stud."
"It's not that. It's
just that there's four widows for every widower down here. Thomas is an
able-bodied man with a good mind and a nice personality. And best of all, he
can drive himself. Such a catch, you wouldn't believe."
She reminded him a little of
Abe. "Speaking of catches, Anya, if you ever decide to move back north,
have I got a guy for you."
She waved her cigarette at
him. "Forget about it. My balling days are over."
Jack shook his head.
"My father, the catch. Wow." He smiled at her. "So if you're not
one of the circling vultures you mentioned, can I ask how you two spend your
time together?"
"It's none of your
beeswax, hon, but I'll tell you anyway: Mostly we play mahjongg."
Another shock. "My
father plays mahjongg?"
"See? I told you there
were things you didn't know about him. I'm teaching him and he's getting very
good." She tapped her temple. "That accountant's mind, you
know."
"My father, the
mahjongg maven. I think I need a drink."
"So doI. Come over
after you've settled in. We'll knock back a few and I'll give you your first
mahjongg lesson."
"I don't know..."
"You have to give it a
try. And once you learn, it'll give you and your father something to do
together."
When there's frost on hell's
pumpkins, Jack thought.
"Anyway," Anya
said, pointing to the house on the right, "this one's your father's. Look
around. I'll be back in a minute."
She headed toward the house
on the left with Oyv trotting behind. Her place was painted...what would they
call that color? He'd never heard of white zinfandel pink as a paint shade, but
if there were such a thing, that would be the color of Anya's house. Dad's was
a more masculine sky blue.
Jack realized he was facing
the rear of the house. He tried the door to the jalousied back porch but it was
locked. It would have taken all of twenty seconds for him to open it but why
bother if Anya had a key.
He strolled the slate walk
between the houses. The grass around the stones was as dead and brown as the
rest of Gateways South; the foundation plantings along the base of the smooth
stucco exterior of his father's place looked thirsty but not as wilted as what
he'd seen along the way. Jack suspected him of sneaking them a little water
during the night.
Then again, maybe not. His
father was such a stickler for rules that he just might watch all his plants
die before breaking one.
Jack tried to peek through
the windows but the shades were drawn. As he backed away from a window he
glanced over at Anya's and stopped dead in his tracks.
Her place looked like a rain
forest. Lush greens and reds and yellows of every imaginable tropical plant
concealed most of the side of her house, not merely surviving, but thriving. A
grapefruit tree, heavy with fruit, stood at a corner. And her grass...a rich,
thick, pool-table green.
A little surreptitious
sprinkling was one thing, but Anya seemed to be thumbing her nose at the water
restrictions.
He noticed a small forest of
ornaments dotting her lawn: the usual elves and pink flamingos and pinwheels of
various models, but in among them were strange little things that looked
homemade, like painted tin cans and bits of cloth on slim tree branches that
had been stuck into the ground.
He spotted a name plaque on
the side of the house. He stepped closer until he could read it.MUNDY.
He walked on to the front of
his father's place. The front yards of the two bungalows sloped down to a pond,
roughly round, maybe fifty feet in diameter. As he approached for a look he
heard a number of splashes as frogs leaped off the bank for the safety of the
water. A black bird stood on the far bank, its chevroned wings spread and held
toward the sun as if storing up solar power. The pond stood full and clear, its
perimeter rimmed with healthy looking grass and reeds. Beyond it lay a grassy
marsh that seemed to stretch forever north and south, but ended at a stand of
tall cypresses about a mile due west. Jack knew it was west because the sun was
dipping behind the treetops.
He turned and checked out
the front of his dad's place. A front porch, covered but open, held a small
round table and a pair of chairs, all white. Some sort of flowering vine was
trying to crawl up the supporting columns. The floor of the front porch was
bluestone slate. A picture window dominated the wall to the left of the door,
but vertical blinds hid the interior. He pulled open the screen and tried the
front door. Locked, just like the rear.
"Here's the key,"
Anya said.
Jack turned to find her
bustling from her green lawn across his father's brown one, a key held up in
her left hand, a cigarette in her right. Oyv paced her.
"Your last name's
Mundy?" Jack said. "Any relation to Talbot?"
"The author?
Possibly."
"King of the Khyber
Rifleswas one of my favorite books as a kid."
"Never read it. Here's
the key." She pressed it into his palm.
He waved his arm at the
vista. "Looks like you two landed prime locations."
"Yes, quite a view. Of
course, I was one of the earliest residents so I had my pick. I'm such a part
of the scenery they hire me for temp work when they need help. Mostly it's just
stuffing envelopes or applying address stickers to advertising brochures. At
minimum wage, I won't get rich, but it gets me out of the house. It lets me
pull a few strings, too. I helped Tom get this place when it went up for
sale."
"Really?" He
wanted to ask her why she'd do that for a stranger but didn't know quite how to
put it. "I guess he owes you for that."
"He owes me more than
he knows." She pointed to the jeweled watch on her wrist. "Don't
forget, hon: drinks at my place in an hour."
"I'll have to take a
rain check on that," Jack said.
"So, you don't want to
drink with an old lady? I understand."
"Hey, come on. That's
not it at all. I just want to check with the police on my dad's accident. You
know, find out how it happened, if it was his fault, that sort of thing."
She frowned.
"Why?"
"Because I want to
know."
"Go tomorrow."
He shook his head. "I
want to know now."
"Why?"
"Because that's the way
I am."
She shrugged and began to
turn away. "Suit yourself."
"Can I ask you a
question?" Jack said. "Two questions, actually."
"Ask away, hon. Doesn't
mean I'll answer."
"Okay. First thing is,
how come that pond's full and all the rest are empty?"
"That one's fed by an
underground channel from theEverglades ."
"TheEverglades ?"
She gestured to the grassy
marsh and the distant cypresses. "There it is. Thomas's place and mine are
just about as close as you can legally build to theEverglades . Next question?
I don't mean to hurry you, hon, but there's a bottle of wine chilling on my
kitchen counter and it's calling my name."
"Sorry. I just want to
know how you keep your grass so green in this drought."
"Just a knack, I guess.
You could say I've got what they call a green thumb."
"Sure it's not just a
wet thumb?"
She frowned and jabbed an
index finger at him. "And if I do, so what?"
"Nothing,
nothing." Jack held up his hands in a defensive gesture. "I just
don't want to see a good friend of my dad's getting in trouble."
She relaxed and puffed her
cigarette. "Well, okay. I guess it's natural to think I'm watering. I'm
not, but no one'll believe me. Would you believe a couple of members of the
board came by and threatened to turn me in if I didn't stop watering."
"What did you tell
them?"
"Honey, I said if they
catch me with a hose in my hand, they can slap the cuffs on. But until then,
they can kiss my wrinkledtuchus !"
Oyv yipped in seeming
agreement as Anya turned and marched off.
My kind of gal, Jack thought
as he watched her go.
13
Jack unlocked his father's front door and stepped into the
cool, dark interior. The shades were pulled, probably to keep it cooler during
the day and cut down on the electric bill. His father had never been cheap, but
he hated waste.
He closed the door behind
him and stood in the darkness, listening, feeling the house. Somewhere ahead
and to the left a refrigerator kicked on. He sniffed. Onions...a hint of
sautéed onions lingered in the air. Dad's doing? He'd always been something of
a chef, probably more so out of necessity after Mom's death, and had this thing
for onions; liked them on just about everything. Jack remembered one Sunday
morning as a kid when he'd sautéed a bunch and put them on pancakes. Everyone
had started out complaining but they turned out to taste pretty good.
Jack stepped over to the
picture window and pulled the blinds, letting in the fading sunlight. Dust
motes gleamed in the air. He pulled up the rest of the shades and started
exploring.
The front area was a large
multipurpose living room/dining room angling into a small kitchen. That was
what Jack wanted. He opened the fridge and found a six-pack and a half of
Havana Red Ale. He checked the label: brewed inKey West . Another local brand.
Why not? He popped the top and took a pull. A little bitter, not as good as
Ybor Gold, but it would do.
He spotted a bottle of
Rose's lime juice on a door shelf. On a hunch he opened the freezer and there
it was: a frosty bottle of Bombay Sapphire. Looked like Dad still liked a
gimlet now and then.
He wandered through the
front room and recognized some of the paintings from the family home inJersey .
He noticed a trophy shelf on the south wall and moved in for a closer look.
First place in the men's doubles in tennis-no surprise there-but what was this?
A plaque for second place in the men's bocce tournament?
My father, the bocce champ.
Jeez.
He called Gia to give her
the medical report on his father. She said how sorry she was that the news
wasn't better. Jack said hello to Vicks, then told them he'd call back later.
After he hung up he stepped
into one of the bedrooms. This looked like a guest room/office: a bed, a
dresser, and a desk with a computer and a printer. Jack saw a list of buy-sell
confirmations in the printer tray. Looked like Dad was still day trading. He'd
started it way before it became the rage in the nineties and had made enough to
retire on. He'd tried to get Jack into it once, saying that if you were vigilant
and knew the ropes, it didn't matter if the market was up or down, you could
make money every day.
Not if you don't have a real
Social Security Number, Dad.
He moved on to the other
bedroom, more cluttered and obviously Dad's. He stopped in the doorway, taken
aback by the photos filling the walls. Mostly Mom, Tom, and Kate at various
ages, salted with a few of Jack as a kid. Here were the five of them as they
embarked on their one and only family camp-out...what a disaster that had been.
Memories flooded back,
especially of Kate-as his teenaged big sister, looking out for him...as an
adult, dying in front of him.
He quickly turned away and
checked the closet. There they were: Dad's ugly Hawaiian shirts. He pulled one
out and looked at it: huge bulgeeyed goldfish swimming in a green fluid that
could only be bile. Jack tried to imagine himself wearing this and failed.
People would...notice him.
As he replaced the shirt he
noticed a gray metal box on the shelf above the rod. He reached for it,
hesitated, then took it down. He thumbed the latch but it was locked. He shook
it. Papers and other things shuffled and rattled inside.
Locked...that piqued his
curiosity. But this was his father's, not his, and probably locked for a good
reason. He should put it back, he knew he should, but...
What would his father keep
locked up when he was the only one in the house?
Jack looked at the little
keyhole. Eminently pickable. All it would take was-
No. Mind your own business.
He put it back on the shelf
and returned to the main room. He repressed a shudder. Time to visit the cops.
Jack found the phone book
and looked up the address of the local police station. He'd planned to call
them for directions, but why not see if he could learn what he wanted over the
phone. Anything to avoid setting foot in a police station.
He dialed the number and was
shuffled around until he wound up with Anita Nesbitt, a pleasant-sounding
secretary who said she'd see what she could do for him.
"I'm assuming I'll need
a copy of the accident report for the insurance," he told her. "You
know, to get the car fixed."
"Okay. Here it is. I'll
put a copy aside and you can pick it up."
"Any way you can mail
it?"
"I suppose. We have his
address on the report. How is your father, by the way? I heard he was pretty
banged up."
"Still in a coma."
A thought struck him. "Was anyone else injured?"
"Not that we know
of," she said. "It was hit and run."
Jack swallowed. Those last
three words sent a wave of unease through his gut.
"Hit and run?"
"Yes. It's under
investigation."
"Save your stamp and
envelope," Jack told her. "I'm coming down to pick up that
report."
14
Dusk had arrived and the air was cooling enough to bring
out the mosquitoes as Jack reached the mustard-yellow building with a two-story
center flanked by single-story wings that served asNovatonCity Hall . A
skeletal clock tower, too modern for the rest of the building, loomed over the
high-columned entrance. A green roof, front portico, and awnings completed the
picture. A sign said the police station was toward the rear on the left side.
Steeling himself, he stepped
inside and asked for Ms. Nesbitt. The desk sergeant directed him to her office.
Walking down the hall, passing cops moving this way and that, he felt like Pee
Wee Herman at a Klan rally. If anyone peeked under the sheet...
He hoped no one asked for ID
to prove his relationship. His father's last name was not Tyleski.
Ms. Nesbitt turned out to be
a plump and pleasant little woman with glossy black skin, short curly hair
tight against her scalp, and a radiant smile.
"Here's the accident
report," she said, handing him a sheet of paper.
Jack took a quick look at
it; he meant to read it later but his eyes were drawn to the diagram of the
accident site.
"Where's this
intersection?" he said, pointing to the sheet. "Pemberton
RoadandSouth Road ?"
She frowned. "They
cross in the swamps on the fringe of theEverglades , way out in the middle of
nowhere."
"What was my father
doing out in the middle of nowhere?"
"That's what we're
hoping you could tell us," said a voice behind him.
Jack turned to see a young,
beefy cop with buzz-cut hair. His massive biceps stretched the seams of the
short sleeves of his uniform shirt. His expression was neutral.
"This is Officer
Hernandez," Anita said. "He took the call and found your father."
Jack stuck out a hand he
hoped wasn't too sweaty. "Thanks. I guess you saved my father's
life."
He shrugged. "If I did,
great. But I hear he's not out of the woods yet."
"You've been keeping
track?"
"We'd like to talk to him,
get some details on the accident. Any idea what he was doing out there at that
hour?"
Jack glanced down at the
report. "What hour?"
"Around midnight."
Jack shook his head. "I
can't imagine."
"Could your father have
been mixed up in something he shouldn't have been?"
"My dad? Into something
shady? He's like..."
Like who? Jack tried to
think of a public figure who was a true straight shooter, whose integrity was
beyond reproach, but came up blank. There had to be somebody. But no one came
to mind. He almost said Mr. Deeds but Adam Sandler had screwed up that
reference.
"He's like Casper
Milquetoast." Jack saw no hint of recognition in Hernandez's face.
"He's a regular everyday Joe who minds his own business and doesn't take
chances. My dad isnot a risk taker." Jack didn't want to call him timid,
because he wasn't. Once he took a position he could be a bulldog about
defending it. "He lived in Jersey most of his life, not fifty miles from
Atlantic City, and in all that time I don't think he once visited the casinos.
So the idea of him being involved in something even remotely criminal is, well,
crazy."
Hernandez shrugged.
"Doesn't have to be criminal. He could have been fooling around with the
wrong guy's wife or-"
Jack held up his hands.
"Wait. Stop. Not him. I promise you. No way."
Hernandez was studying him.
Uh-oh. Here it comes.
"Do you live around
here?"
"No. I'm still inJersey
." Where did Tyleski live? All these identities...after a while they ran
together in his head. "InHoboken ."
"How often do you see
your father? How many times a year do you visit him?"
"He hasn't been here
that long. Less than a year."
"And?"
"And this is my first
visit."
"Do you talk
often?"
"Uh, no."
"Then you really don't
know that much about your father's life down here."
Jack sighed. There it was
again. "I guess not. But I know what kind of man he is, and he's not a
sneak or a liar, and people who are have no place in his life."
But how much more do I know?
he wondered. What do you know about anyone, even someone who raised you, beyond
how they act and what they've told you about themselves?
Anya's comment from this
afternoon stole back to him:Trust me, kiddo, there's more to your father than
you ever dreamed .
He hadn't paid much
attention to it then, but now with Dad the victim of a hit-and-run accident in
the middle...
"Say, if he got hit in
the middle of nowhere..." He turned to Anita. "Didn't you say a call
came in?"
She nodded. "It's in
the report."
"But that means someone
must have witnessed it."
"That's the obvious
conclusion but..." Hernandez's macho cop persona wavered. Just a little.
"But what?"
"Well, it took me about
twenty minutes to reach the intersection, and when I got there, your father's
car was the only vehicle at the scene and it looked like the accident had just
happened. The car was sitting acrossPemberton Road . From the debris spray I
reckoned your father had been proceeding west on Pemberton. He had a stop sign
at South. Looked like he was almost halfway across when he got hit. Maybe he
hadn't been paying attention, maybe he ran the stop sign, maybe he was having a
little stroke. All I know is that something hit him hard enough to spin the car
ninety degrees, and there was no one else in sight when I got there."
"Then who called
in?" Jack said. "Man or woman?"
"Tony, the desk
sergeant took it. I asked him but he couldn't tell. Said the person was
whispering, real quick like. Said, 'Bad accident at Pemberton and South.
Hurry.' That was it."
"Did they ID the
number?"
Hernandez glanced at Anita.
"That's another thing we can't figure out. The call came from a pay phone
outside the Publix."
"Publix? What's a
Publix?"
"Like a
Winn-Dixie."
"I'm sorry." Was
this another language they were speaking? "I'm from up north and I still
don't-"
"Publix is a chain of
grocery stores down here," Anita said. "It's like..." She
snapped her fingers. "I've been up your way. What's it called...? A&P.
That's right. Like an A&P."
"Okay. And where's this
Publix?"
"About three blocks
from here."
"What? But how?
That's..."
"Impossible?"
Hernandez said. "Not really. The hit-and-run driver might have been into
something illegal and that's why he didn't stop. But he might have had an
attack of conscience and called a friend and told him to call it in from a
public phone so we couldn't ID him."
"Thank God for attacks
of conscience," Anita said.
Hernandez nodded. "Amen
to that. All I can say is it's a good thing we got the call when we did,
otherwise your father might have been DOA."
15
Jack's mind raced as he drove toward the south end of
Novaton.
After telling Hernandez
where he was staying and promising not to leave without checking in with him-in
case the cops had more questions-he'd left the police station in something of a
daze. But not before getting directions to the impound lot where his dad's car
had been towed.
A hit-and-run driver damn near
kills his father but has enough Good Samaritan in him to arrange for the cops
to be notified. A mixture of bad luck and good.
But the big question still
remained: What the hell was Dad doing out there in the swamp at that hour?
The light had pretty well
faded by the time Jack reached the south end of town. As Hernandez had told
him, he passed an old limestone quarry, then a trailer park, then came to the
impound lot.
It turned out to be a
combination junkyard/used-car lot called Jason's. The place was closed. Jack
could have climbed the chain-link fence but didn't want to risk an encounter
with a guard dog, so he wandered the perimeter, squinting at the wrecked cars
within.
The accident report said the
make was-what else?-a silver Mercury Grand Marquis, the unofficial state car
ofFlorida , and gave the plate number. Jack found it near the gate. He clutched
the fence and gaped at the front end. The bumper was gone, the right front
fender was a memory, the windshield was a caved-in, spider-webbed mess, the
engine block was tilted and canted and twisted to the left.
Had he run into a tank?
Jack's fingers squeezed the
chain-linked wire, making it squeak. Who'd done this and run off? Maybe Dad had
been thinking of something else and hadn't seen the stop sign. Okay. His bad,
not the other driver's. But still...what the hell had the other guy been
driving?
16
Jack's stomach started to growl as he left Jason's. He
realized he hadn't eaten anything since the crabcake sandwich at Joanie's. He'd
seen a Taco Bell on the way in and couldn't help thinking of little Oyv. He
stopped for a couple of burritos and a Mountain Dew to go.
As he ate and drove, he
decided to swing by the hospital on his way back to Gateways South and have
another look at his dad.
On the third floor, Jack met
Dr. Huerta coming out of the room, followed by a red-haired nurse. Her picture
ID badge readC. MORTENSON, RN.
"How is he? Any
change?"
Dr. Huerta shook her head
and brushed back a vagrant strand of hair. She looked tired.
"The same. Still a
score of seven. No better but, thankfully, no worse."
Jack supposed that was good.
But he hadn't come here tonight just to see his father.
"Where are his personal
effects?"
"Effects?"
"You know, his clothes,
his wallet, any papers he had on him."
Dr. Huerta glanced at Nurse
Mortenson who said, "They're in a locker by the nurses' station. I'll get
them for you."
Dr. Huerta moved on and Jack
stepped into his father's room. He stood by the bed, watching him breathe,
feeling helpless and confused. This wasn't right. His father should be at
Anya's place, drinking gimlets and playing mahjongg instead of lying here
unconscious with tubes running in and out of him.
Mortenson came in with a
clipboard and clear plastic bag.
"You'll have to sign
for this," she said. As Jack made an illegible scrawl across the sheet,
she added, "We couldn't keep his clothes. The blood, you know."
"But you emptied his
pockets first, right?"
"I assume so. That's
done in the ER, long before he gets to us."
Jack handed back the
clipboard and took the bag. Not much in it: a wallet, a watch, some keys, and
maybe a buck's worth of change.
When the nurse was gone,
Jack checked the wallet: an AmEx and a MasterCard, AARP and AAA cards, a Costco
card, seventy-some dollars in cash, and a couple of restaurant receipts.
Jack dropped it back into
the bag. What had he been hoping for? A note with a cryptic message? A scrap of
paper with a hastily scribbled address he could check out?
Watching too many mystery
movies, he told himself.
Maybe thereis no mystery.
Maybe it was just an accident. Maybe Dad was simply out for a drive and wound
up in the wrong place at the wrong time...got clocked by accident by someone
who wasn't quite legit and couldn't hang around to explain himself to the
police.
Jack understood that.
Perfectly.
Just an accident...a random
collision...
But his gut wasn't buying.
Not yet at least.
Jack looked down at his
father.
"Have you been holding
out on me, Dad?"
No response, of course. He
patted his father's knee through the sheet.
"See you
tomorrow."
17
Fortunately Anya had left her gate passcard in Jack's car.
He used it to breeze through the resident's arch. The old lady's lights were
out by the time Jack reached the house. Her lawn ornaments clinked and clanked
and whirred in the dark.
Once inside, he went
straight to his father's room and took out the metal lockbox.
"Sorry, Dad," he muttered
as he carried it to the kitchen.
He hated invading his
father's privacy, but this box might hold an explanation as to why he'd been
out in the swamps after midnight instead of home in bed.
First, a beer. He grabbed
another Havana Red from the fridge, then searched the bathroom for a pair of
tweezers. He found one, and twenty seconds later the lid popped open. Jack
hesitated. Maybe there were things in here his father didn't want anyone to
know about. And maybe Jack wouldn't want to know about them once he saw them.
Maybe parents should be able to keep their secrets.
All fine and good when they
weren't the comatose victim of a hit and run.
Jack lifted the lid.
Not much there. A handful of
black-and-white photos, now sepiaed with age, and something that looked like a
small jewelry case. He checked the photos first. Mostly soldiers. He recognized
his dad in a few of them-he didn't recall him ever having that much hair-but
most were of other uniformed guys in their late teens or early twenties posing
awkwardly for the camera against unfamiliar landscapes. Jack spotted a
pagoda-like building in the background of one.
Korea. Had to be. He knew
his dad had been in the war, in the Army, but he'd never wanted to talk about
it. Jack remembered pressing him for war stories but getting nowhere.
"It's not something I care to remember," he'd always say.
The last photo was a posed
shot of eight men in fatigues, four kneeling in front, four standing behind,
grinning at the camera. His father was second from the left, standing. It
looked like a plaque had been set up in the right foreground but that corner of
the photo was missing. It appeared to have been torn off.
Jack studied the other seven
men, looking for a connection to his father. Who were they? They all looked so
young. Like a high school varsity basketball team. It looked like a graduation
photo. But from what?
Maybe he'd never know.
He put down the photos and
picked up the jewelry case. Something rattled within. He snapped it open and
found two medals. He didn't know much about military decorations but one he
immediately recognized.
A Purple Heart.
His father's? That meant
he'd been wounded. But where? The only scar he'd ever seen on his father was
from his appendectomy. Maybe this belonged to someone else...a dead war buddy
that his father wanted to remember?
Nah. Purple Hearts tended to
be kept by the loved one's family.
Which meant this was
probably his father's.
He checked the other medal:
a gold star hanging on a red-white-and-blue ribbon; a smaller silver star was
set at its center. This could be a Silver Star. Wasn't that for extraordinary
bravery in battle?
Trust me, kiddo, there's
more to your father than you ever dreamed.
I guess you got that right,
lady. Maybe I should have stayed in touch more.
Funny...just a few months
ago he wouldn't have felt this way. But after reconnecting with Kate...
With frustration wriggling
under his skin like an itch he couldn't scratch, Jack replaced the contents to
the box in roughly the same order that he'd found them. He'd wanted answers,
but all this damn box had provided was more questions.
He returned it to the closet
shelf, then headed back to the kitchen for another beer. Along the way he
spotted his father's watch on the table. He hadn't noticed the cracked crystal
when he'd brought it home from the hospital. He checked it out. An old Timex.
No, not old-ancient. The wind-up type. Typical of him: If the old one still
works, why get a new one? This Timex had taken a licking but hadn't kept on ticking.
It had stopped at 12:08.
Wait a sec...
Jack pulled the accident
report out of his pocket and unfolded it. He'd scanned through Officer
Hernandez's report. He'd mentioned a call coming in to the station at...where
was it? Here.
11:49P.M.
But that would mean the
accident had been reported before it happened. No way. His father's watch must
have been set ahead. Some people did that. Or maybe he'd forgotten to wind it.
But not his father. He'd
always been a stickler for the correct time, down to the minute. And he'd
always wound his watch at breakfast. Jack had seen him do it a million times.
Hernandez was mistaken about
the time of the call. Had to be. But for all his brawn the cop had seemed like
a pretty tight, spit-shine type. And hadn't he said that even though it took
him twenty minutes to reach the accident, it looked like it had just happened?
Shaking his head, Jack went
to the fridge. He decided against another beer. Right now he needed a gimlet.
Wednesday
1
Jack awoke with a buzzing in his ears. At first he thought
it was a mosquito, but this was lower pitched. Then he thought it might be
gimlet-related, but he'd had only two. Finally he realized it was coming from
outside the window. He lifted his head and looked around, momentarily
disoriented by the unfamiliar room.
Oh, yeah. He was at Dad's
place. In the front room. Must have fallen asleep on the couch. He'd foundRio
Bravo playing on TNT or some such station and had watched it for about the
thirtieth time-not for John Wayne or Dean Martin, and certainly not for Ricky
Nelson, but for Walter Brennan. Hands down, Stumpy was his best part, best job,
ever-except maybe for his Old Man Clanton inMy Darling Clementine . Old Walt
made the movie for Jack.
But where was that buzzing
coming from?
He rolled off the couch,
padded to the kitchen, and squinted through the window.
A groundskeeper was running
a weed whacker along the edge of the dead grass bordering the foundation
plantings. Was that a long-sleeved flannel shirt he was wearing? In this
weather? Where Jack came from a long-sleeved shirt in the summer meant one
thing: junkie.
But the weed whacker...he
blinked and shook his head...it looked like it was coming out of the guy's
right sleeve.
The rest of Jack's clothes
were still in the car so he had to go out anyway. Maybe he could get a closer
look along the way.
The heat and humidity hit
him like a wave as he stepped outside. Barely 8:30 and already it was cooking.
As he rounded the corner, the groundsman stopped working and stared at him,
then turned off his weed whacker.
"You ain't Tom.
Whattayou doin here?"
"I'm his son."
And yes, that was a flannel
shirt he had on. He wore green work pants and a tattered olive drab boonie cap.
His eyes were a piercing blue, but the left angled to the outside-the kind of
eye known on the street as a bent lamp. Yet even this close Jack couldn't see
his right hand. The weed whacker seemed to be growing out of the sleeve. Jack
thrust out his own right hand in hopes of getting a look.
"My name's Jack."
The groundsman used his left
hand to give Jack's a squeeze. "Carl."
So much for that strategy.
"How come you're out
here so early?" Jack said. "You can't have much to do with this
drought."
"Be surprised,"
Carl said. "Grass won't grow, tropical plants get all curly and dried up,
but the weeds...the weeds do just fine. Never able to figure that out."
"Maybe they should all
cultivate weeds," Jack said.
Carl nodded. "Fine with
me. Green is green." He glanced at Jack. "Miss Mundy told me about
your daddy. How's the old guy doin?"
"Still in a coma."
Jack fought the urge to
sidle to his right to put himself in line with Carl's left eye.
"Yeah?" He shook
his head. "Too bad, too bad. Nice guy, your daddy. He was one of the good
uns."
"'Was'? Hey, he's not
goneyet ."
"Oh, yeah. Right,
right. Well, let's hope he pulls through. But bein so close to the Glades and
all..."
"TheEverglades ? What's
wrong with that?"
Carl looked away.
"Nothin. Forget I said it."
"Hey, don't leave me
hanging. If you're going to start a thought, finish it."
He kept his gaze averted.
"You'll think I'm loco."
You don't know loco like I
know loco, Jack thought.
"Try me."
"Well, all right.
Gateways here is too close to the Glades. It's been mistreated for years and
years now. All the freshwater runoff it's upposed to get from upstate, you
know, from Lake Okeechobee, it's mostly been channeled away to farms and
funeral-parlor waitin rooms like Gateways. Everywhere you look someone's
filling in acres of lowlands and paving it over to build a bunch of houses or
condos. The Glades been hurt in for years and years, but this year's the worst
because of the drought. Summer's upposed to be our rainy season but we ain't
had barely a lick."
"There's still water
out there, though, isn't there?"
"Yep, there's water,
but it's low. Lower than it's ever been in anyone's memory. And that could be
bad. Bad for all of us."
"Bad how?"
"Well, maybe things
that always used to be underwater ain't under no more."
Where was this going?Was it
going anywhere?
"Carl-"
He stared toward
theEverglades . "The good thing bout your daddy's and Miss Anya's places
here on the pond is you never have to look into someone else's
backyard..."
Jack glanced out at the
endless expanse of grass. "Yeah. A panoramic view."
"Pan-o-ramic?"
Carl said carefully. "What's that?"
Jack wondered how to explain
it. He spread his arms. "It means wide angle...a wide view."
"Pan-o-ramic...I like
that."
"Fine. The panoramic
view is the good thing, but I've got a feeling you were about to tell me a down
side."
"I was. The bad part
is...they's real close to the Glades and the Glades ain't happy these days. You
might even say it's kinda pissed. And if it is, we'd all better watch
out."
Jack stared across the mile
or so of grass at the line of trees. He'd seen a bunch of weird things lately,
but an angry swamp...?
You were right, Carl, he
thought. I do think you're loco.
2
Semelee stood on the lagoon bank with Luke and watched the
small dredgin barge suck wet sand out of the sinkhole and deposit it into one
of the even smaller, flat-bottomed boats it had towed along behind it. Excess
water ran out the gunwales and into the lagoon. The clan had moved the
houseboats aside to give the barge access to the hole.
"I still can't believe
you done this, Semelee," Luke said. "You of all people."
Semelee had been surprised
herself. She didn't like outsiders gettin anywheres near the clan's lagoon, and
especially near the sinkhole, but these folks had offered too much money to
turn down.
"You been sayin that
for two weeks now, Luke. Every time the barge shows up you say the same thing.
And every time I give you the same answer: We can use the money. People're
pretty tight with their spare change these days, in case you ain't
noticed."
"Oh, I noticed, all
right. Probably cause they ain't got all that much to spare. But I still don't
like it, specially this time of year."
"Don't worry. They'll
be outta here before the lights come. The deal I made with them was they had to
finish up their business before this weekend. The lights'll start comin Friday
night. Told them Friday was a stone-solid deadline. Didn't care how much they
offered me, by sundown on Friday, they're gone."
"Still don't like it.
This is our home. This is where we was born."
"I know, Luke,"
she said, rubbing his back and feeling the sharp tips of the fins through the
cloth. "But just think. The top of the sinkhole is above water for the
first time anyone remembers. Maybe for the first time ever. When the lights
come this time, they won't have to shine through the water. They'll shine
straight out into the night. That's never happened before, at least not in
anyone's memory."
"I ain't so crazy about
that neither." He rubbed a hand over his face. "My daddy said them
lights made us the way we is, twisted us up, just like it's twisted the trees
and the fish and the bugs around here. And that's from when they was just
shining up through the water. What happens this year when there ain't no water?"
Semelee felt a thrill at the
prospect. "That's what I want to see."
The lights had been comin
twice a year-at the spring and fall equinoxes-for as long as anyone could
remember. Her momma had told her they'd kept that schedule every year since
she'd been born, andher momma had told her the same thing.
But Semelee's momma'd said
that years back the lights started gettin stronger and brighter. And it wasn't
long after that, maybe a few years, that the people livin around the lagoon
started noticin changes in the plants and the fish and things around the
sinkhole. It started with the frogs missin legs or growin extra ones. Then the
fish started lookin weird and the plants started gettin twisted up.
All that was bad enough, but
when the lagooners' kids started bein born dead or strange lookin, the
lagooners moved out. Not as a group to the same place, but piecemeal like, in
all different directions. Some stayed as close asHomestead , some as far
asLouisiana andTexas . After they moved away, they stopped havin strange kids
and they was happy about that.
But the strange kids they
already had wasn't happy. Not one bit. Not because they was all mistreated by
people as they was growin up-Semelee hadn't been alone in that-but because when
they all finally growed up they felt like somethin was missin in their lives.
One by one they all-all the
misshapen ones-found their way back here to the lagoon and learned that this
was where the itch stopped, this was where they felt whole, where they
belonged. This was home.
And home was where your
family lived. They came to call themselves a clan, and all decided to stay here
on the lagoon.
Yet even with this big
family-type gang around her, Semelee still felt a yearning emptiness within.
She wanted more,needed more.
"Why do they hafta
takeour sand? There's plenty of sand around. Why they want ours?"
"Don't rightly
know," Semelee said.
"Who is they,
anyway?"
"Blagden and Sons. You
know that."
"Yeah, I know the name,
but that's all it is: a name. Whoare they? Where do they come from?"
"Don't know, Luke, but
their money's good. Cash up front. That's bout as good as it gets."
"Do they know about the
lights?"
"That one I can answer:
Yeah, they know about the lights."
Some guy named William
somethin from this company called Blagden and Sons come around in a canoe a few
weeks ago askin if anyone'd been seein funny lights about this time of the
year. The clan folk he talked to sent him to Semelee since she was sorta the
leader round here. Not that she'd ever looked to be the leader, but it seemed
whenever somethin needed decidin, she wound up the one who did it.
Semelee played it cagey with
this William fellow until she was pretty sure he wasn't no tour-guide type or
scientist or anything like that, and wouldn't be bringing boatloads of
strangers or teams of pointy heads to peek or poke at the clan and the
sinkhole. Nope, all William wanted was to haul off the dirt and sand from
around where they'd seen the lights.
When Semelee had told him
they'd been comin up through this sinkhole that used to be underwater but was
now gettin dry, he got all excited and wanted to know where it was. Semelee
pretended she wasn't gonna tell him, and held off even when he offered money.
So he offered more money and more money until Semelee had to say yes. Maybe she
could've held out for even more, but there weren't no sense in gettin all
greedy about it.
When she'd took him to the
sinkhole she thought he was gonna pee his pants. He danced around it, callin it
a senn-oaty or somethin like that. When she asked him what he was talkin about
he spelled it for her: C-E-N-O-T-E. Told her it was a Mex word and you said it
like coyote. Semelee liked sinkhole better.
The dredgin was all
hush-hush, of course. The clan wasn't upposed to be livin here on the lagoon,
this bein a National Park and all, and Blagden and Sons wasn't upposed to be
takin the sand.
"Matter off act,"
she told Luke, "I'm pretty sure they want the sandbecause of the
lights."
"That's kinda scary,
dontcha think? Them lights ain't natural. They changed us and everythin around
them. Probably even changed the sand in that hole."
"Probably did."
Luke looked uneasy.
"What on earth could they want it for? I mean, what're they gonna do with
it?"
"Can't rightly say,
Luke. And I don't rightly care. That ain't our worry. What I do know is that
our little sinkhole is gonna be a lot deeper without all that sand. And that
just may mean that the lights'll be brighter than ever. When the time comes
maybe someone can even look down into that hole and see where they're comin
from."
"Who's gonna do
that?" Luke said.
Semelee kept her eyes on the
rim of the deepening hole. "Me."
Luke grabbed her arm.
"Uh-uh! You ain't! That's crazy! I won't let you!"
She let Luke have sex with
her once in a while when she felt the need, and that probably was a mistake. She'd
told him flat out from the git-go that it didn't mean nothin, that they was
just now-and-again fuck buddies and that was all there was to it, but she'd
probably made a mistake lettin it get started. Still, every so often she needed
to get laid and Luke was the least ugly of anyone else in the clan. Trouble
was, it let him feel like he owed her, like he had to protect her or somethin.
If anyone needed protectin,
it wasn't her.
"You got nothin to say
about it, Luke," Semelee told him as she wrenched her arm free of his
grasp. "Now lemme be. I gotta get to town."
"What for?"
She flashed him a sly smile.
"I'm joinin the nursin profession."
He shook his head.
"What? Why?"
Semelee felt the smile melt
away in a blaze of anger. "To finish your half-assed job from the other
night!"
3
As Jack stepped out of the elevator on the hospital's
third floor, he spied Dr. Huerta waiting to get in.
"Any change in my
father?"
She shook her head.
"Stable, but still level seven."
"How long can this go
on?" he said. "I mean, before we start thinking about feeding tubes
and all that?"
She stepped into the
elevator. "That's a bit premature. I know it must seem like a long time to
you, but it's been less than seventy-two hours. The IVs are perfectly adequate
for now."
"But-"
The elevator doors slid
shut.
Jack walked down the hall to
his father's room, wondering if Anya would be there. He'd stopped by her place
before leaving this morning, threading his way through the gizmos crowding her
lawn, to offer her a ride to the hospital if she needed it. But she hadn't
answered his knocks.
Normally that wouldn't have
bothered him, but with old folks...well, you never knew. She could have had a
stroke or something. Jack had peered through the front door glass but hadn't
seen anyone on the floor or slumped in a chair. Then he'd remembered Oyv. The
little dog would have been barking up a storm by then if he'd been around.
But Anya wasn't in his
father's room either-he checked the corners and behind the curtains, just to be
sure. Empty except for the patient.
He stepped to the side of
the bed and gripped the limp right hand. "I'm back, Dad. Are you in there?
Can you hear me? Give a squeeze, just a little one, if you can. Or move just
one finger so I know."
Nothing. Just like
yesterday.
Jack pulled up a chair and
sat at the bedside, talking to his father as if the old guy could hear him. He
kept his voice low-pausing when the nurses buzzed in and out-and discussed what
he'd learned about the accident and the conflicting information, dwelling on
the time discrepancies between the report and his father's watch. He'd hoped
talking it out would clarify the incident for him, but he was as confused
afterward as before.
"If only you could tell
me what you were doing out there at that hour, it would clear up a whole lot of
questions."
Once off the subject of the
accident, he thought he'd run out of things to say. Then he remembered the
pictures in his father's room and decided to use them as launch pads.
"Remember the family
camping trip? How it never stopped raining...?"
4
After an hour or so of talking, Jack's mouth was dry and
his vocal cords felt on fire. He stepped into the bathroom to get a drink of
water. As he was finishing his second cupful his peripheral vision caught a
flash of white. He turned to see a nurse approaching his dad's bed. She hadn't
been around before; he was sure he would have noticed her if she had. She was
pretty in an odd way. Very slim, almost to the point of boyishness, and with
her dark skin-made all the darker by the contrast of her white
uniform-prominent nose, and glossy black hair trailing most of the way down her
back in a single braid, Jack thought she might be part Indian-not the Bombay
kind, the American kind.
She had her hand in the
pocket of her uniform-little more than a white shift, really-and seemed to be
gripping something.
Jack was about to step out
of the bathroom and say hello when he noticed something strange about her. Her
movements were odd, jerky. She'd slowed her progress toward the bed and seemed
to be straining to move forward, as if the air was holding her back. He saw
sweat break out on her forehead, watched her face flush and then go pale as she
forced herself forward another step. He watched her throat working, as if she
was trying to keep from vomiting.
Jack stepped out and
approached her.
"Miss, are you
all-?"
She jumped, twisted toward
him, staring with wide, confused, onyx eyes. Her hand darted from her pocket to
a thong tied around her neck, and Jack thought he saw something move in the
pocket.
She shook her head, pulling
on the slim leather thong around her neck. It snapped but she barely seemed to
notice. She was drenched in sweat.
"Who-?"
Before Jack could reply she
turned and staggered out of the room. He started to go after her but heard a
groan from the bed.
"Dad?" He rushed
over to the bed and grabbed his father's hand again. "Dad, was that
you?"
He squeezed the fingers-gently
at first, then harder. His father winced, but Dr. Huerta had said he was
responsive to pain. After shaking his father's shoulder and calling to him, all
with no response, he backed off. Nothing happening here.
He went out to check on that
nurse. Something wrong about her...besides looking sick.
At the nursing station he
found a big, brawny, gray-haired nurse who seemed to be in charge. Her photo ID
badge readR SCHOCH, RN.
"Excuse me," he
said. "A nurse just came into my father's room, then turned and ran out.
She looked kind of sick and I was wondering if she was okay."
Nurse Schoch frowned-or
rather, her frown deepened. It seemed to be her only expression. "Sick? No
one said anything." She looked around at the assignment board.
"Three-seventy-five, right? What was her name?"
"I didn't get a look at
her badge. Come to think of it, I don't think she was wearing one."
"Oh, she had to be.
What did she look like?"
"Slim, dark, maybe
five-three or so."
Schoch shook her head.
"No one like that here. Not on my shift, anyway. You sure she was a
nurse?"
"I'm not sure of a lot
of things," Jack muttered, "and that's just been added to my
list."
"She could have been
from housecleaning, but then she would have been in gray instead of white-and
she'd still have to have a badge." She picked up a phone. "I'll call
security."
Jack wished she wouldn't-he
didn't want rent-a-cops messing into this-but couldn't think of a reason he
could tell Schoch.
"Yeah, okay. I'll be
back in my father's room."
He'd been keeping an eye on
the door, making sure no one else went in there. When he returned, he checked
his father to see if he'd moved-he hadn't-then went to the window and looked
out at the parking lot. He saw a slim woman in white walking away through the
lot. Heat from the late-morning sun made her shimmer like a mirage.
It was her. Couldn't mistake
that long braid. And now she was climbing into the passenger side of a battered
old red pickup.
Jack dashed into the hall in
time to see the elevator doors closing. Too slow anyway. He found the stairs
and raced down to the first floor. By the time he hit the parking lot, the
pickup was gone. But he kept moving, running to his Buick and gunning out to
the street. He flipped a mental coin and turned right, telling himself he'd
give this ten minutes and then call it quits.
He'd traveled about half a
mile when he spotted the truck, stopped at a red light two blocks ahead.
"Gotcha," he said.
When the light changed he
followed the truck out of town and into the swamps. Somewhere along the way the
pavement ended, replaced by a couple of sandy ruts flanked by tall, waving
reeds. He lost sight of the truck for a while but wasn't going to worry about
that unless he came to a fork. Better to stay out of sight. Luckily there were
no forks, and before too long he was pulling into a clearing at the edge of a
small, slow-moving stream.
The red pickup sat there,
idling, while the woman in white rode downstream in a small, flat-bottomed
motor boat piloted by a hulking man in a red, long-sleeved shirt. Jack jumped
out of his car and ran to the bank, waving his arms, calling after them.
"Hey! Come back! I want
to ask you something!"
The woman and the man turned
and stared at him, surprise evident on their faces. The woman said something to
the man, who nodded, then they both turned away and kept moving. He saw the
name on the stern:Chicken-ship .
"Hey!" Jack
shouted.
"Whatchoo wanner
for?" said a voice from behind.
Jack turned and saw a man
with a misshapen head leaning out the driver window of the pickup. With his
bulbous forehead, off-center eyes, and almost non-existent nose he reminded
Jack of Leo G. Carroll from the opening scenes ofTarantula . This guy made
Rondo Hatton look handsome.
"I want to talk to her,
ask her a few questions."
"Looks to me like she
don't wanna talk to you." His voice was high and nasal.
"Where does she
live?"
"In the Glades."
"How do I find
her?"
"You don't. Whatever it
is, mister, leave it be."
Suddenly another guy,
thinner and only marginally better looking, jumped into the pickup's passenger
seat.
Where'd he come from?
The new guy slapped the
driver on the shoulder and nodded. Neither looked too bright. If someone
suggested playing Russian roulette with a semiautomatic, they'd probably say,
"Cool!"
The driver gave Jack a
little two-finger salute. "Welp, nice talkin to ya. Gotta go now."
Before Jack could say
anything the guy threw the truck into gear and roared off. Jack raced back to
his car. If he couldn't follow the girl, then he'd tail these two. Sooner or
later they had to-
He skidded to a halt when he
saw the Buick's flat front tire, and the gash in its side wall.
"Swell," he
muttered. "Just swell."
5
"I don't get it," Luke said as he piloted
theChicken-ship deeper into the swamp. "Who was that guy?"
Semelee pulled off the black
wig and shook out her silver white hair. She didn't feel like talkin. Her
stomach still wasn't right.
"He saw me in the room.
I think he might be the old guy's kin."
"That why he was
trailin you?"
"Maybe. I don't know.
All I know is I felt so strange in that room. It started as soon as I stepped
through the door and got worse and worse the closer I got to the old man's bed.
I started feeling sick and weak, and the air got so thick I could barely
breathe. I tell you, Luke, all I wanted to do was get out of there and get far,
far away as fast I could."
"Think it was the
guy?"
"Could've been, but I
don't think so."
This man wasn't just a guy,
wasn't just one of the old man's kin. This man was the one she'd sensed coming
for the past two days, and he was special. She sensed something about him...a
destiny, maybe. She didn't know exactly what, she just knew he was special.
So am I, she thought. But in
a different way.
Maybe she and this new man
was destined to be together. That would be wonderful. She liked the way he
looked, liked his hair, his build-not too beefy, not too slight-liked his brown
eyes and hair. She especially liked his face, his regular, normal face. Hangin
round the clan like she did, she didn't see too many of those.
Maybe he'd been sent to her.
Maybe he was herefor her. Maybe they was meant to share their destinies. She
sure hoped so. She needed someone.
"Well, if you don't
think it's him made you sick," Luke said, "what was it?"
Semelee pulled the white
dress off over her head, leaving her wearing nothin but a pair of white
panties. She looked down at her small, dark-nippled breasts. Losers in the size
sweepstakes, maybe, but at least they didn't sag. One of the guys she'd screwed
in high school had called them "perky." They were that, she guessed.
Keepin her back to Luke-she
didn't want him gettin all hot and bothered out here on the water-she slipped
into her cutoffs and a green T-shirt.
"I don't know. It was like..."
She shuddered as she remembered that awful sick feelin runnin through her body,
like she was being turned inside out..."like nothin I ever felt before.
And I hope I don't never feel it again."
She turned and whacked Luke
on the leg as hard as she could.
He jumped. "Hey,
what-?"
"And I wouldna had to
feel it in the first place if you and Corley had done the job you was upposed
to!"
"Hey, we did just what
we was upposed to. You was there."
"I wasn't there."
"Well, you was watchin.
You saw what happened. The sacrifice was goin exactly accordin to plan when
that cop showed up outta nowhere. I said all along we shoulda just flattened
the old guy inside his car and have done with it."
She hit him again. "Don't
you never learn? The old man had to be done in by somethin from the swamp or
else it ain't a sacrifice, it's just a killin. And we ain't about just killin.
We got a purpose to what we're doin, a duty. You know that."
"Awright, awright. I
know that. But I still can't figure why that cop had to come along just then.
We never seen him out there before."
"Maybe he was
sent," Semelee said as the thought struck her.
"Whatchoo mean?"
"I mean maybe whoever
was protectin the old man today was protectin him the other night as
well."
"How can that be? We
was the only ones who knew we'd be out there."
"I don't know how and I
don't know why, but someone's protectin that old man."
"You mean like with
magic?"
"Maybe."
Lotsa people'd see what
Semelee could do as magic, so why couldn't there be someone else out there who
could do somethin different but just as magical? Might be all sorts of magical
people out there no one ever dreamed of.
"I ain't got no idea
who right now, but I'm gonna find out. And when I do..."
She reached down and removed
a palm-sized toad from the pocket of the discarded white dress. She held it up
and stroked its back. This little feller was a relative to the big African
marine toads some fool had brought intoFlorida sometime in the last century. It
had only three legs-its left arm was nothing but a nubbin-but it had these
swollen glands startin behind each eye and runnin down its back in a pair of
lines. Those glands was full of poison. Every so often a dog would lick or bite
one of its bigger cousins and die. This little guy came from the clan's lagoon
where his family had bathed in the glow of the lights for generations, and he
was even more poisonous. Just a little drop on a tongue was enough to stop a
grown man's heart.
That had been Semelee's
plan: sneak into the room, press the toad's back against the old man's lips,
then get out. A minute or so later he'd be on his way to his maker and the job
would be done.
She'd have to think of
another plan now.
After she set the toad on
the front seat of the boat, where it squatted and watched her with its big
black eyes, her hand instinctively went to her breastbone to touch-
She stiffened. What? Where
is it?
Then she remembered-the
thong had broken in the hospital room. As she'd fled the terrible feelin, she
recalled stuffin it into a pocket.
She rummaged in the
uniform's other pocket and heaved a sigh of relief when she felt the slim
thong. She pulled it out, expecting to see the pair of black freshwater clam
shells she wore around her neck. She gasped when she saw only one.
"What's wrong?"
Luke said.
Semelee didn't answer him.
Instead she lifted the uniform and pawed through one pocket then the other.
"Oh, no! It's
gone!"
"What's gone?"
"One of my eye-shells
is missin!"
"Check around your
feet. Maybe it fell out when you was gettin changed."
She checked, running her
fingers along the slimy bottom through the inch or so of water.
"It's gone!" she
cried, feeling panic rising like a tide. "Oh, Luke, what am I gonna do? I
need them!"
She'd had the eye-shells
ever since she was twelve. She'd never forget that moment. Her mother'd taken
her to her daddy's funeral. That was the first time she'd ever seen him...or at
least remembered seein him. He'd up and left Momma when Semelee was just a
baby, soon after they moved toTallahassee . He was Miccosukee Indian, banished
from the tribe for somethin Momma never knew. She'd hooked up with him at the
lagoon-lots a people livin round the lagoon back then was on the run from
somethin or other-and the three of them moved outta there along with everyone
else shortly after Semelee was born.
Her daddy-or rather the man
who'd knocked up her momma-had been killed in a bar fight. Some of his
Miccosukee kin had decided to give him a proper Indian send-off and his wife
and child was invited.
She'd been scared of the
whole idea of lookin at a dead man, so she'd hung back, as far away from the
body as she could. Just getting her first period the day before and feelin sick
and tired didn't help none. That was when she spotted the old Indian woman in a
beaded one-piece dress starin at her from across the room. She had eyes black
as a bird's and hair like Semelee's, but also the wrinkles to go with it. She
remembered how the old lady'd come close and sniffed her. Semelee'd shrunk
back, scared, embarrassed. Did her period smell?
The old woman'd nodded and
showed her gums in a toothless smile. "You wait right here, child,"
she'd whispered. "I've got something for you."
And then she'd gone away.
Semelee'd hoped she wouldn't come back but she did. And when she did she came
carryin two black freshwater clam shells. They'd been drilled through near
their hinges and was strung on a leather thong.
She took Semelee's hand,
pried open her tight-clenched fingers, and pressed the shells into her palms.
"You got the sight, child. But it's no good without these. You take them
and keep them close. Always keep them close. You'll need them when you're
ready, and you'll be ready soon."
Then she'd walked away.
Semelee's first thought had
been to throw them away, but she changed her mind. Nobody hardly ever gave her
anything, so she kept them. She didn't know what the old lady had been talkin
about-"You got the sight," and all that-but it made her feel special.
Till that time in her life she'd never run into nothin that had made her feel
special. As for "the sight"...maybe someday she'd find out what that
meant.
And one day she did find
out. And it had changed her life.
"Now just relax,
Semelee," Luke was sayin. "It's got to be somewheres. Probably fell
out while you was sittin in the truck. We'll find it."
"We got to!"
She needed those eye-shells
to do her magic. She'd kept them slung around her neck so's they'd never be
away from her. But now...
Those eye-shells'd saved her
life...or rather, stopped her from killing herself.
It had been a day, a Tuesday
in May in her sixteenth year, when everything that could go wrong did. She'd
tried new hair dye the night before. Every other one she'd ever tried in the
past-and she'd tried them all-didn't take. The dye just ran off her hair like
water off wax. This one was touted as different, and promised to turn her hair
a luxurious chestnut brown. And it looked like it might work. It didn't run off
like the others.
But when Semelee looked in
the bathroom mirror that morning she saw that instead of chestnut brown her
hair had turned fire-engine red. Worse, it wouldn't wash out.
Maybe the color woulda been
okay for the dopers and weirdoes who just wanted attention or wanted to show
how they were rejecting their parents or society or whatever, but it was awful
for Semelee. She'd spent her whole life bein rejected. She wanted tobelong .
After crying for a few
minutes-she would have liked to scream but Momma and her new boyfriend Freddy
were in the bedroom down the other end of the trailer-she tried to figure what
to do. She would've liked to call out sick and spend the day washin her hair,
but that would leave her alone with Freddy, and the way she kept catchin him
lookin at her gave her the creeps. Not that she was a virgin or nothin-she was
havin plenty of sex-but Freddy...yuck.
So she dried her bright red
hair, jammed a cap over it, and headed for school. Not a good start to the day
but it got worse as soon as Suzie Lefferts spotted her. She'd had it in for
Semelee since grammar school and never passed up a chance to torment her. She
yanked off Semelee's cap just for sport, but when she saw the color of her hair
she raised a holler and called all the other girls over, sayin look who's here:
Lucy Ricardo!
Their laughter and cries of
"Luuuuceeeeee!" chased her down the hall, right into the arms of
Jesse Buckler. She was Jesse's latest squeeze-or rather, he was hers. Depended
on how you looked at it. Semelee had discovered that the way to a boy's heart was
through his fly. Dates for her had been as few as turtle teeth until she turned
fifteen and started puttin out. After that it was a different story. She knew
she had a rep but so what? She liked screwin, and durin sex was the only time
she was sure she had a boy's undivided attention.
Jesse pulled her into the
boy's room and for a minute she thought they was gonna have sex there-screw in
school, how cool. But when she saw Joey Santos and Lee Rivers standin there
with their flies open and their peckers at attention, she got scared. She tried
to run but Lee grabbed her and said Jesse told them how she gave the best blow
job in school and they wanted a sample. She said no and how she'd report them
and they laughed and said who'd believe the school slut? They called her
"Granny" and Jesse said how he got off doin it to an old lady.
The words shocked Semelee.
She'd thought of herself as somethin of a goodtime gal, of easy virtue maybe,
but not the school slut. And it wasn't like Semelee loved Jesse or nothin, or
ever even entertained the idea that he loved her, but...he'd been talkin about
her like she was a pull of chewin tobacco that he was gonna pass around between
his friends.
With some kickin and clawin
she broke free and ran out-not just out of the boys room, but out of the school
as well. She could've gone to the principal, but it would be the word of three
of the football stars against the school slut, and besides, nothin had
happened.
So she'd run home. And there
was Freddy. Alone. Drinkin a beer. And horny. He offered her a brew, then
started touchin her. Semelee just snapped. She started screamin and throwin
things and the next thing she knew Freddy was out the door and headin for his
car.
He musta called Momma
because half an hour later she came stormin in, started slappin at Semelee,
callin her a little whore for playin hooky so she could come on to Freddy. Now
look what she'd done! Freddy was gone, sayin he wasn't stayin in no house with
a freaky piece of jailbait tryin to get him in trouble.
Momma wouldn't listen to
her, and Semelee'd been hurt that her own momma was takin Freddy's side over
hers. But then Momma crushed her, sayin she wished Semelee'd never been born,
wished she'd died like all the other girls been born to the lagoon folk round
that time, that she'd been a weight around her neck ever since, draggin her
down, her white hair scarin off the men interested in Momma.
That did it. Semelee busted
out through the door with no direction in mind and kept goin. She wound up on
the beach where she collapsed on the sand. Her momma, who she'd thought of as
her best friend, her only true friend, hated her, had always hated her. She
wanted to die.
She thought about drowning
herself but didn't have the energy to jump in the water. The tide was out so
she decided to just lie here on the sand and let the water come to her, wash
her out to sea, and that would be the end of it. No more hassles, no more names
like "Granny," no more heartbreak, no nothin.
She lay there on her back in
the sand with her eyes closed. The sun was so bright it blazed through her
lids, botherin her. She didn't have her sunglasses on her but she did have
those two shells around her neck. They was just the right size to go over her
eyes. It'd be like layin in a tannin booth.
As she sat up to untie the
thong, she saw the gulls glidin overhead and wished she had wings like them so
she could fly away.
She lay back on the sand and
fitted a shell over each eye-
What?
She snatched the shells away
from her eyes and levered back up to sittin.
What just happened?
She'd put the shells over
her eyes expectin to see black. But she'd seen white instead...white sand...and
she'd been above it, lookin down on a girl lyin in the sand...a girl with
shells over her eyes.
Semelee put those shells
over her eyes again and suddenly she was lookin down on a girl sitting in the
stand-a girl with fire-engine hair.
That's me!
She pulled off the shells
again and looked up. A seagull hovered above, looking down at her, probably
wondering if she had a sandwich and might throw it a crust or two.
She started experimentin and
found she could look through the eyes of any bird on the beach. She could soar,
she could hover, she could spot a fish near the surface of the water and dive
for it. Then she discovered she could see through fishes' eyes, swim around the
rocks and coral and stay underwater as long as she pleased without comin up for
air.
It was wonderful. She spent
the rest of the day testin her powers. Finally, after the sun had set, she
headed home. She didn't want to go there, didn't want to see her momma's face,
but she had no place else to go.
When Semelee opened the door
to the trailer Momma was all tears and apologies, sayin she hadn't really meant
what she'd said, that she was just upset and talkin crazy. But Semelee knew the
truth when she heard it. Momma had said what was deep in her heart and meant
every word of it.
But Semelee didn't care now.
She'd thought her world had ended but now she knew it was just beginnin. She
knew she was special. She could do somethin no one else could do. They could
make fun of her, call her names, but no one could hurt her now.
She was special.
But now she'd lost one of
her shells. She'd lose all her specialness without them. She'd be a nobody
again.
Semelee gripped the edges of
the canoe in white-knuckled panic. "I just had a terrible thought, Luke.
What if I dropped it back in that hospital room?"
6
When Jack returned to his father's room, almost an hour
after he'd left, he was in a foul mood. He could have called the rental agency
to come and change the tire, but had canned that course of action. He'd had no
idea where he was, so how could he tell them where to find him?
So he'd changed the tire
himself. No biggee. He'd changed a lot of tires in his day, but usually on
pavement. Today the jack had kept slipping in the sand, fraying his patience.
Then the clouds wandered off to let the sun out so it could cook him. But all
that wouldn't have been so bad if the mosquitoes hadn't declared his skin a
picnic ground. Never in all his life had he seen so many mosquitoes. Now his
forearms looked like pink bubble wrap and the itching was driving him nuts.
Felt like a jerk for letting
those yokels sandbag him like that.
The TV was on and some news
head was talking about Tropical Storm Elvis. It had lost a lot of steam
crossing northernFlorida but was now in the Gulf where it was gaining strength again,
stoking itself over the warm waters. Elvis had not entirely left the building.
He went to the bed and
checked his father. No change that he could see. He stepped to the window and
looked out again at the parking lot. Who were they, the girl and those
odd-looking people? From the way the girl had approached the bed-or at least
started to-she'd come here with a purpose. But what?
As he turned back to the bed
he spotted something on the floor, something glossy black and oblong. He
squatted beside it, wondering if it was some sort ofFlorida bug, a roach maybe.
But no, it looked like a shell. He bent closer. It was curved like a mussel but
flatter. Some kind of clam, maybe.
As he reached to pick it up,
something under the bed caught his eye. Not under the bed exactly-more like
behind the headboard. Looked like a slim tree branch standing on its end.
Jack picked up the shell and
stepped to the head of the bed. He peeked behind the headboard and found a tin
can painted with odd little squiggles sitting atop the branch. He'd seen
something like this before, then remembered Anya's yard-it was full of them.
He smiled. The old lady must
think they're good luck or something. Probably put it here for him when she
visited the other day. Might as well leave it. Sure as hell wasn't doing Dad
any harm. And who knew? Maybe it would help him. Jack had seen a lot stranger
things these past few months.
As he straightened he
noticed a glistening design on the back of the headboard. He slid the bed a few
inches away from the wall for a better look. Someone had painted a pattern of
black squiggles and circles there. No question as to who, because they were
very similar to the squiggles on the can. But how had that skinny old lady
moved the bed? It was damn heavy.
Jack decided to ask her
later. He pushed the bed back, then placed the shell on the nightstand. Maybe
one of the staff had dropped it. If so, they could reclaim it here. At least
this way no one would step on it.
Scratching his arms, Jack
said goodbye to his father and headed back to the car. He hoped his father had
some calamine lotion at home.
7
Back at Gateways Jack found another car parked in the
cul-de-sac. Maybe Anya had company. But when he went around to the front of his
father's place he found the front door open and heard voices inside.
He stepped into the front
room and found a young woman in a jacket and skirt showing an elderly couple
through the house.
"Who the hell are
you?" Jack said.
The old folks jumped and the
young woman clutched her looseleaf notebook defensively against her chest. Jack
figured he might have had a little too much edge on his voice, but that was the
kind of mood he was in.
"I-I'm with
Gateways," the woman said. "I'm showing this couple the house."
She squared her shoulders defiantly. "And just who are you?"
"The owner's son. What
are you doing here?"
The woman blinked. "Oh.
I'm so sorry for your loss, but-"
"Loss? What loss? You
talk as if my father's dead."
Another blink-a double this
time. "You mean he's not?"
"Damn right, he's not.
I just came from the hospital. He's not too healthy at the moment, but he's not
dead."
The old couple were looking
uncomfortable now. They stared at the ceiling, at the rug, anywhere but at
Jack.
"Oh, dear," the
younger woman said. "I was told he was."
"Even if he was, so
what? What are you doing here?"
"I was showing it to
these-"
Fury hit him like a kick in
the gut. Vultures!
"Showing it? Where do
you get off showing this place to anyone? It's his until he sells it."
Another squaring of the
shoulders, this time with a defiant lift of the chin. "Apparently you
don't know the arrangement in Gateway communities."
"Apparently I don't.
But I'm going to find out. As for now"-he jerked a thumb over his
shoulder-"out."
"But-"
"Out!"
She strode out the door with
her head high. The old couple shuffled out behind her.
"I'm sorry," the
old woman said, pausing as she passed.
"Not your fault,"
Jack told her.
She put a wrinkled hand on
his arm. "I hope your father gets well soon."
"Thank you," he
said, feeling suddenly deflated.
He closed the door after
them and leaned against it. He'd overreacted. He told himself it was the
frustration of all these questions with no answers. Not one goddamn answer.
Bad day. And it was only
noon.
He was just turning away
from the door when he heard a knock. He counted to three, promised he'd be more
genteel this time about telling the sales lady where she could stick her
commission, and pulled open the door.
But Anya stood there
instead. She held out a familiar taped-over FedEx box.
"This came while you
were out," she said. "I signed for it."
Ah. His Glock and his
backup. Now he could feel whole again.
"Thanks."
"Heavy," she said.
"What've you got in there? Lead?"
"You might say. Come on
in where it's cool."
"I can't stay. You were
by the hospital already?"
Jack nodded. "No
change." He debated whether or not to ask her about the can on the stick
behind his father's headboard but decided to save it for later. "Are you
going over?"
She nodded. "I thought
I'd sit with him for a while."
What a grand old lady.
"I'll give you a lift."
She waved him off.
"I've already called a cab." She turned to go. "I'll be back
later. Cocktails at five, if you're available."
He couldn't turn her down
twice. "It's a date." Jack thought of something. "By the way,
who's the head honcho around here?"
"You mean
Gateways?"
"Yeah. The general
manager or acting director or chairman of the board of whatever you call him.
Who runs the show?"
"That would be Ramsey
Weldon. You can find him at the administration building. You can't miss it.
It's mostly glass and right on the golf course. Why?"
"We need to have a
little tęte-ŕ-tęte," Jack said.
8
The administration building was pretty much as Anya had
described it: a small, cubical structure sheathed in mirrored glass. As Jack
got out of his car he saw a tall, distinguished-looking man unlocking the door
to a classic-looking four-door sedan. He looked fiftyish, had longish black
hair, graying at the temples, and wore a milk-chocolate brown lightweight silk
suit that perfectly matched the color of his beautifully restored car:
two-tone-white over brown-with wide whitewall tires.
"Am I dreaming,"
Jack said, "or is that a 1956 Chrysler Crown Imperial?"
The man's smile was
tolerant, and his tone carried a hint of impatience.
"It's a Crown Imperial,
all right, but not a Chrysler. Everyone makes that mistake. Chrysler spun off
the Imperial into its own division in 1954. This baby came out two years
later."
"It's beautiful,"
Jack said, meaning it.
He ran a hand along the
crest of the rear fender to one of the stand-alone taillights, sticking up like
a miniature red searchlight. The chrome of the split grille gleamed like a
gap-toothed grin; the flawless finish threw back his reflection.
God, he wished he could use
something like this for his wheels. But it was too conspicuous. The last thing
he wanted was people to notice him as he drove around. That was why he'd
finally given up Ralph, his old '63 Corvair convertible. People kept stopping
him and asking about it.
"You restore this
yourself?"
"Yes, it's a hobby of
mine. Took me two years. Fewer than eleven thousand Imperials were made in '56
and only a hundred and seventy were Crowns. This one has the original engine,
by the way-a 354-cubic-inch Hemi V-8."
"So it cranks."
"Yes, indeed. It
cranks." He looked at Jack. "Visiting, I assume?"
"Yeah, in a way. My
father's in the hospital in a coma and-"
"You're Tom's son? Poor
man. How is he?"
Jack was surprised at the
instant recognition. "Not great. You know him?"
He stuck out his hand.
"Ramsey Weldon. I'm director of Gateways South."
"Isn't that
something," Jack said, shaking his hand. "I came here looking for
you."
"I bet I know why, too.
I got a call from one of our sales team. It seems she was given false
information about your father. The initial word from the hospital was that he
was DOA. I'm terribly sorry about the misunderstanding."
"Okay," Jack said.
"I can see somebody getting the wrong information, but where did she get
off showing the place to prospective buyers?"
"Because she
thought-erroneously-that the place belonged to Gateways."
"Where would she get an
idea like that?"
Weldon's eyebrows rose.
"Upon the death of the owner-or owners-the house reverts to
Gateways."
"You're kidding."
He shook his head.
"That's the arrangement. It's not unique. Plenty of graduated-care senior
communities have similar arrangements."
"I can't believe my
father signed on for that."
"Why not? His purchase
of the home and the bond guarantees him not only a place to live, but quality
care from the moment he signs to the moment he goes to meet his maker, no
matter how long it takes. Members of a Gateways community will never be a burden
on their families. 'What do we do with Papa?' or 'Who's going to take care of
Mom?' are questions that will never arise in their families."
A smooth pitch, delivered
with the timing and conviction of a lifelong salesman. Jack could see how powerful
that pitch could be to someone like his father who had a lot of pride and had
always been an independent sort.
"At no point,"
Weldon went on, "will your father be a burden on his children. And at no
point will you have to feel guilty about him, because you can rest assured that
he's being well cared for."
"Maybe it's not so much
guilt I'm feeling as-pardon me if I sound paranoid, but it seems to be to your
advantage to have a quick turnover in housing."
Weldon laughed.
"Please, please, we're asked that all the time. But you have to remember,
this isn't a Robin Cook novel. This is real life. Trust me, it's all been
amortized and insured and reinsured. You can check our financials. Gateways is
a public company that posts an excellent bottom line every year."
He noticed that Weldon was
starting to sweat. But then, so was Jack. It was like a steam bath out here on
the macadam.
"Then I'm not the first
to raise the question."
"Of course not. Our
society is conspiracy crazy, seeing dark plots wherever it looks. I assure you,
Gateways takes excellent care of its citizens. Wedo care. And our caring is
what makes our citizens recommend Gateways to their friends and relatives. That's
why we have waiting lists all over the country and can't build these
communities fast enough. Just one example is the availability of free annual
exams I instituted last year to catch medical problems early when they're most
treatable."
"Really? Where are they
done?"
"Right there in the
clinic." He pointed to a one-story structure a hundred yards away across a
dead lawn. "It's attached to the skilled nursing facility."
Jack guessed that was
Gateways-speak for nursing home.
"Do you think I could
speak to the doctor about my father?"
"Please. Go right
ahead." He glanced at his watch. "Oops. Going to be late for my
meeting." He thrust out his hand again. "Nice meeting you, and good
luck to your father. We're all pulling for him."
He slipped into his car and
started it up. Jack listened to the throaty roar of its V-8 and, again, wanted
one.
He watched him drive away.
During all that talk he'd tried to get a bead on Ramsey Weldon but couldn't get
past the smooth all-business, all-for-the-company exterior. If his father's
accident hadn't been hit and run, he wouldn't have bothered. But since it
was...
He shook his head. Maybe he
was just looking for something that wasn't there. He knew there was plenty going
on out there where no one could see. He didn't need to be inventing a
conspiracy around here.
9
The doctor working the clinic today was named Charles
Harris. He wasn't too busy at the moment so Jack got to see him after only a
short wait.
A nurse led him into a
walnut-paneled consultation room with a cherry wood desk and lots of framed
diplomas on the walls. Harris wasn't the only name Jack saw, so he assumed
other doctors rotated through the clinic. Dr. Harris turned out to be a young,
dark, curly-haired fellow with bright blue eyes. Jack introduced himself by his
real surname-a name he hadn't used in so long it tasted foreign on his lips-and
then added: "Tom's son."
Dr. Harris hadn't heard
about the accident but offered his wishes for a speedy recovery. Then he wanted
to know what he could do for Jack.
"First off I'd like to
know if my father had a physical here recently."
Dr. Harris nodded.
"Yes, just a couple of months ago."
"Great. Dr. Huerta is
his neurologist at the hospital-"
"I know Inez. Your
father's in good hands."
"That's comforting. But
I'm wondering about his medical condition before the accident."
Jack thought he sensed Dr.
Harris recede about half a dozen feet. "Such as?"
"Well, anything that
might have contributed to the accident, or might explain what he was doing
driving around at that hour."
Dr. Harris leaned forward
and thrust his hand across the desk, palm up.
"Could I see some
ID?"
"What?" Jack
hadn't seen this coming. "What for?"
"To prove you're who
you say you are."
Jack knew he couldn't. All
his ID was in the name of John Tyleski. He owned nothing with his own surname.
"I've got to prove I'm
my father's son? Why on earth-?"
"Patient privilege.
Normally I wouldn't under any circumstances discuss a medical file without the
patient's permission, even with a spouse. But since this particular patient is
incapable of giving permission, I'm willing to make an exception for a close
relative-ifthat's what you are."
Since Jack couldn't show ID,
maybe he could talk his way around this.
"If I wasn't his son,
why would I care?"
"You could be a lawyer
or someone hired by a lawyer looking for an angle to sue."
"Sue? What the hell
for?"
"On behalf of someone
injured in the accident."
"But my father was the
only one injured."
Dr. Harris shrugged. "I
don't know that. I know nothing about the accident. I do know that people in
these parts sue at the drop of a hat. They're caught up in some sort of lottery
mentality. Malpractice insurance is through the roof. People may not be able to
figure out a presidential ballot but they damn sure know what lawyer to call if
they stub a toe."
He could see Dr. Harris was
getting steamed just talking about it.
"Look, I assure you I'm
not a lawyer. I can't even remember the last time I spoke to one-that is, if
you don't count my brother who's a judge inPhiladelphia ."
Maybe that'll mollify him,
Jack thought.
It didn't.
"On the other
hand," Dr. Harris said, "you could be a con man looking to pull some
kind of slimy scam."
"Like what?" Jack
was interested in hearing this.
He shrugged. "I don't
know, butFlorida 's got more con men per square mile than any other state in
the union."
"I'm not a con
man"-at least not today-"and I'm concerned about my father. In fact,
you've got me worried now. What's wrong with him that you won't tell me? What
are you hiding?"
"Not a thing." Dr.
Harris wiggled the fingers on his still outstretched hand. "We're wasting
time. Just show me some ID and I'll tell you what I know."
Shit.
"I don't have it with
me. I left it at my father's place."
Dr. Harris's features
hardened. He shook his head and stood up. "Then I'm afraid I can't do
anything for you." He hit a buzzer. "I'll have the nurse show you
out." "All right," Jack said, rising. "But will you at
least call Dr. Huerta and tell her what you know?"
Dr. Harris obviously hadn't
expected that one.
"I...well, of course. I
can do that. I'll call her this afternoon."
As frustrated and worried as
he was, Jack had to respect this guy's ethics. He forced a smile and thrust out
his hand.
"Thanks. Nice to meet
you, doc. You could be classified as a real pain in the ass, but I'm glad my
dad has someone like you looking after his privacy. My doc at home is the same
way."
Of course, Doc Hargus was a
different case. His license to practice had been pulled, so no one was supposed
to know he evenhad patients.
Jack didn't wait for the
nurse. He left the thoroughly befuddled Charles Harris, MD behind and headed
for the clinic exit.
Along the way he paid close attention
to the windows and the walls-especially the upper corners near the ceiling-and
the door frame as he stepped through it. No alarm contacts or release buttons,
no motion detectors.
Good.
10
"Is it workin?" Luke said. "Can you
see?"
Semelee sat on a bench in
the galley of theBull-ship . Some of the clan was in town, beggin, while others
was ashore, dozin in the shade. She and Luke were the only ones aboard. She
wished he'd get away and stop hangin over her shoulder and leave her be. But
his heart was in the right place and so she bit her lip and kept her voice low.
"Just give me a minute
here, Luke," she said as she adjusted her one remaining shell over her
right eye. "Just give me a little space so's I can see if I can get this
to work."
It was so different with
only one shell. With two she could focus right in. With one...
With only one eye-shell she
could still get into the heads of higher forms like Dora, but the lower
forms...they were hard even with two. They didn't have much goin for them
brainwise, and that meant she had to concentrate all the harder. If only she had
that other shell.
"I could take a few of
the guys and hop the fence and watch him ourselfs. We-"
"Just hesh up, will
you? I think I'm gettin it."
"Yeah?"
She could hear the hope, the
excitement in his voice.
She didn't see any way she
or one of her clansmen could sneak into the hospital to hunt down that other
eye-shell, but if she could keep an eye on the old guy's son, the special one
who'd been sent to her, maybe she'd find out if he had it.
But she had to get control
here.
Control...back in her teens
she'd thought her power was limited to only seein through a critter's eyes, but
she soon learned that was just part of the story. She found out in her junior
year when Suzie Lefferts paid her a visit on the beach.
Semelee had been comin down
to the ocean almost every day, except for the rainy ones, to put on her
eye-shells and fly, soar, and dive with the flocks, or swim and dart through
the depths with the schools. She could even get into a crab and crawl along the
sandy bottom. These was the only times she felt truly alive...truly free...like
she belonged.
The sudden sound of a
too-familiar voice behind her jarred her back to the beach.
"So this is where you
spend all your time."
Suzie must have realized
that she was no longer getting to Semelee, that her taunts and tiny tortures
weren't having their usual effect. So she'd followed her to see why.
"I thought you might've
had a new boyfriend or something," Suzie said, "but all you do is sit
here with those stupid shells over your eyes. You were always a loser, Semelee,
but now you've totally lost it."
When Semelee didn't even
remove the shells from her eyes or bother to reply, Suzie flew into a rage. She
grabbed the shells and put them over her own eyes.
"What is it with these
things anyway?"
Oh, no! She'd see! She'd
know!
But Suzie mustn't've seen
anything. She called them junk and tossed them toward the surf.
Terrified they might wash
out to sea, Semelee screamed and ran down to the tide's edge. She found what
she thought was them-they were freshwater clamshells after all-but wasn't sure.
As Suzie walked up the dune laughing, Semelee wanted to choke her, but she
couldn't go after her, not until she made sure she had the right shells...to
see if they still worked...
They did. She put them on
and there she was, glidin high over the beach, watching Suzie strutting toward
her car. The bitch!
Suddenly she was divin
toward Suzie, beak open, screechin. She plowed into the back of her neck,
staggerin the bitch. And then she was peckin at her head, cuttin her scalp and
tearin out her teased blond hair in chunks.
Semelee was so surprised she
dropped her shells. She watched the squawkin gull leave Suzie's head and flap
away while Suzie ran screamin for her car. The truth smacked Semelee right
between the eyes then: She couldn't just get inside things and look through
their eyes, she could control them, make them do what she wanted.
This cool feelin of power
surged through her. She wasn't just a tiny bit special, she wasreally special.
But was she all that special
with only one shell?
She clapped a hand over her
left eye and focused all her will, all her concentration through her right.
Something was coming into focus. A blade of grass, dry and brown, loomed huge
in her vision, like the trunk of a tree.
"I'm there!" she
cried. "I got one. Now I got to get another."
And another after that, and
another, and another...
This was going to take time
and effort. Lots of effort.
"I got to spread myself
around the old guy's house and get in if I can."
"You really think he
has it?"
"Don't know. But I'm
gonna do my damnedest to find out."
"And if he got it, then
what?"
"We ain't come to that
bridge yet, Luke. When we do, we'll figure somethin out."
And maybe in the meantime
I'll just test this guy's inner stuff, she thought. See if he's worthy of me.
11
Jack's head was spinning. Not from the wine he'd been
drinking but from this damn game he was trying to learn.
He'd spent the latter part
of the afternoon in his father's hospital room with Anya-and Oyv, of course. No
change in Dad's condition-still the same random, involuntary movements and
incomprehensible sounds. He'd been hoping to see Dr. Huerta and find out if Dr.
Harris had contacted her. He figured he might be able to get her to tell him what
the doc was hiding about his father's pre-accident condition.
But she didn't show, and
finally he drove Anya and Oyv back to Gateways. She didn't let up on his
joining her for a drink, so after a shower and a call to Gia to reassure
himself that she, Vicky, and the baby were fine, he ambled next door.
He found Anya outside on her
front lawn, cigarette in one hand, wineglass in the other, reclining face up on
a chaise lounge next to a big liter-and-a-half bottle of red wine chilling in
an ice bucket. She wore huge sunglasses with turquoise frames. Her flat breasts
were encased in a pink halter top over skimpy black shorts. She'd coated the
exposed areas of her wrinkled, leathery brown skin with some sort of
sun-tanning oil and lay marinating in the sun.
Oyv was curled up next to
her. He barked once when Jack stepped across the line of dry brown grass onto
Anya's lush green lawn, then settled down again.
"I started without you,
hon," she said. "Pull up a chair and pour yourself a glass."
"Chilled red
wine," Jack said. "I don't think I've ever had that."
"Don't tell me you're a
wine snob."
Jack shook his head. "A
bit of a beer snob, maybe, but I wouldn't know a cabernet from a merlot without
the label."
"Glad to hear it.
You've probably had people tell you that the only wine you should drink cold is
white or blush or rosé. Trust me, kiddo, they're talking out theirtuchuses .
This is a Côtes du Rhone. That's French, by the way."
"Really?"
"You probably expect an
old broad like me to be a whiskey sour orManhattan drinker, but as far as I'm
concerned, on a hot summer day like this, a glass of chilled Côtes du Rhone
orBeaujolais hits the spot. Try it and see if you like it. If you don't, sorry,
but that's what we serve at Casa Mundy. You want beer, you'll have to bring
your own. I'm not into that fizzy hops-and-malt drek."
So Jack poured himself a
glass and damn if it didn't, as Anya had said, hit the spot.
"Not bad."
He pulled up a chaise lounge
on the other side of the table with the ice bucket.
"How come you're the
only one visiting my father? Doesn't he have any other friends?"
"He has lots. But they
probably don't know. I think I'm the only one who knows, and I don't talk to
many people."
"How did you find
out?"
"When I saw his car was
missing Tuesday morning, I called the police and asked if there'd been any
serious accidents. They sounded pretty suspicious until I told them why I was
calling. They told me about your father so I went right over to the hospital to
see."
"Shouldn't you let
people know?"
"Why? So they can send
dead flowers and come in and stare at him? Tom wouldn't want that."
No, he wouldn't. Jack guessed
she did know his father after all.
Together they sat and sipped
and watched the sun settle in the west.
"Maybe we'd better go
in," Jack said as it sank below the distant treetops. He checked his
watch. 7:10. "The Wehrmacht mosquito squadrons will be launching
soon." "So?"
"You like mosquito
bites?"
"You like to deny those
poor females their sustenance?"
"Females?"
"Only the female
mosquito bites. The males suck nectar."
"Male or female, I'm
not keen on being a mosquito buffet."
She waved a hand at him.
"Not to worry. They won't bother you here."
"Why not?"
"Because I won't let
them."
Ooookay, lady, Jack thought.
If that's what you want to believe.
But damn if they didn't sit
there well into the dusk without a single mosquito bite.
When the magnum of Côtes
duRhone was done, Anya draped a fuchsia blouse over her shoulders, rose, and
faced him.
"Come on inside, hon.
I'll fix you dinner."
Not having a better offer,
Jack accepted.
He stopped short as he
crossed the threshold. He'd thought the outside was lush, but inside was a mini
jungle of potted plants and trees lining the perimeter and clustered here and
there on the floor, with vines growing among them and climbing the walls. He
could identify a ficus here, a bird of paradise and a rubber plant there, but
the rest were a mystery: potted palms of all sorts-were those baby bananas on
the big one in the corner?-and smaller plants with leaves mixing reds and
yellows and even silver on a couple. Reminded Jack of one of the plant shops
onSixth Avenue .
Anya turned to him and said,
"I'm going to change into something more appropriate for dinner."
"What's wrong with what
you're wearing?"
"I want something
morehaute couture ," she said with a wink.
"Not necessary, but
this is your party..."
As she threaded her way
through the plants toward the master bedroom, Jack decided to take a look
around. Oyv, curled like a cat on a worn yellow easy chair, watched him with
his big dark eyes as he wandered the front room.
He realized that her layout
was the mirror image of his father's-whatever was on the right here, was on the
left there. But where his father's walls sported some artwork-mostly
southFlorida beachscapes-and some photos, Anya's walls were bare except for the
vines. Not a shell, not a fishnet, not a knick knack. Nada.
She'd said she had no
family. Jack guessed she was right. But how about a painting ofsomething ? Even
Elvis or a tiger on black velvet would say something about her.
And the furniture...a
nondescript mishmash. Jack knew his talents for interior décor were on a par
with his ability to fly a 747, but this stuff looked like secondhand junk. Fine
if Any a didn't care, but he was struck by the lack of personality. He'd been
in motel rooms with more personal touches than this. It was as if she lived in
a vacuum.
Except for the plants. Maybe
they were her personal statement. Her family. Her children.
Anya reentered and struck a
pose with one arm held aloft. "What do you think?"
She'd wrapped herself in
some sort of psychedelic kimono which made her skinny figure seem even thinner.
She looked like a Rainbow Pop that had been left out in the sun too long.
"Woo-woo," Jack
said.
It was the best he could do
on such short notice.
Dinner turned out to be as
idiosyncratic as the chef. She mixed up a wok of walnuts, peanuts, peas,
jalapeńo peppers, and corn seasoned with, among other things, ashes falling
from her ever-present cigarette, all rolled up in big flour tortillas. Despite
Jack's initial reservations, the mélange proved very tasty.
"Can I hazard a guess
that you're a vegetarian?" he said.
They were into their second
magnum of Côtes du Rhone. Anya kept refilling his glass, and Jack noticed that
she was putting away two or three glasses to every one he had, but showing no
effects.
Anya shook her head.
"Heavens, no. I don't eat vegetables at all. Only fruits and seeds."
"There's corn in
this," Jack said around a mouthful. "Corn's a vegetable."
"Sorry, no. It's a
fruit, just like the tomato."
"Oh. Right." He
remembered hearing that somewhere. "Well, how about the peas?"
"Peas are
seeds-legumes. Nuts are seeds too."
"No lettuce, no
broccoli-?"
"No. Those require
killing the plant. I don't approve of killing. I eat only what a plant intends
to discard."
"What about Oyv?"
He glanced at the littleChihuahua chowing down on something in his bowl.
"He needs meat."
"He does perfectly well
on soy burgers. Loves them, in fact."
Poor puppy.
"So I guess if I stop
by with a craving for a bacon cheeseburger-"
"You can just keep on
going, hon. There's a Wendy's not too far down the road toward town."
Gia would be right at home
here, Jack thought. She wasn't a vegan or anything, but she'd stopped eating
meat.
Whatever. This dish was
delicious. Jack wound up having four burritofuls.
He helped clear the dishes,
then Anya brought out the mahjongg tiles, saying, "Come, I'll teach
you."
"Oh, I don't
know..."
"Don't be afraid. It's
easy."
She lied.
Mahjongg was a four-person
game played with illustrated tiles, but Anya was teaching him a two-player
variant. The images on the tiles swam before his eyes-circles, bamboo stalks,
ideograms that were supposed to represent dragons or the four winds-while terms
such aschow andpong andchong searched for purchase in his brain. He didn't have
any references for this stuff. Why couldn't the tiles have spades and hearts or
jacks and queens and kings?
The constant stream of smoke
from the chimney that was Anya didn't help. Neither did her plants. They seemed
to be watching the game, like a gaggle of curious spectators crowding around a
high-stakes poker table inLas Vegas . One strand of vine with broad green and
yellow leaves kept falling off a palm frond and draping across his shoulder.
Jack would put it back, but it wouldn't stay up.
"That's
Esmeralda," Anya said.
"Who?" Jack
replied, thinking she was referring to some new tile or rule in the game.
"The gold-net honeysuckle
behind you." She smiled. "I think she likes you."
"I'm not fond of clingy
women," he said, reaching once again to remove the vine from his shoulder.
But when he saw Anya's frown he changed his mind and let it stay where it was.
"But in this case I'll make an exception."
She smiled and Jack thought,
Sweet lady, but nut so, nut so, nut so.
In addition to the green,
leafy distractions, all the wine he'd consumed wasn't exactly helping his
learning curve. Anya lifted the bottle-she'd opened a third magnum-to give him
a refill. Jack put his hand over his glass.
"I'm flagging
myself."
"Don't be silly, hon.
It's not as if you have to drive home."
"I have something I
want to do tonight."
"Oh? And that would
be...?"
"Just getting some
answers to a few questions."
"Answers are a good
thing," she said. Her voice was clear, her hand steady as she refilled her
glass almost to the rim. No doubt about it: The woman had a hollow leg.
"Just make sure you're asking the right questions."
12
Even in his slightly inebriated state, Jack had no trouble
entering the clinic. All it took was a flat-head screwdriver from his father's
toolbox to pop the window lock and he was in.
He'd managed to extricate
himself gracefully from the mahjongg lesson with a promise to return for
another real soon. He wasn't big into board games, although he'd playedRisk a
lot as a kid. He liked video games, though. Not so much the first-person shooters
that were mostly reflexes; he did well in those but preferred role-playing
games that involved strategy. He liked trying to outwit the designers.
After leaving Anya's he'd
gone back to his father's place and doused himself with a mosquito repellent
spray he'd found on a shelf with the tennis racquets and balls. Then he'd
walked around some to clear his head and get the lay of the land. Here it was
9:30 and no one was out. This was good. An occasional car drove by but he'd
duck into the bushes as soon as he saw its lights. One set of lights had turned
out to be a cruising security patrol jeep.
A couple of times he'd
stayed in the bushes longer than he had to because of the faint feeling that he
was being watched. He couldn't find a trace of anyone following him, though,
and wrote it off to his being on unfamiliar ground.
He'd approached the clinic
building from the rear, where there was less light, and held his breath as he
lifted the window, ready to run in case it was armed with an alarm system he
hadn't spotted. But nothing sounded.
Made sense when he thought
about it. Why spring for the extra expense of alarming all the buildings when
you had a real live security force manning the gates and patrolling the
streets?
He crawled through, closed
the window behind him, and began searching about. He used the penlight he'd
found in his father's top drawer, flicking it on and off as he moved. He found
the small file room to the right of the receptionist area. He'd been hoping it
would be windowless, but it wasn't, so he had to search the files with his
penlight.
Again that feeling of being
watched, but he was the only one here. He sneaked to the window but saw no one
outside.
A few minutes later he found
his father's slim chart. Holding it in his hand, he hesitated before opening
it. What was the bad news Dr. Harris had been hiding? He knew the question-did
he want the answer?
Again, the matter of his
father's privacy. The information inside could be pretty intimate. Did he have
a right to peek this far into the man's life?
Probably not. But the guy
was in a coma, and Jack needed answers.
Taking a breath, he opened
the file and flipped through it. He found two pages of lab test results. He
didn't know what all these numbers meant but noted that the
"Abnormal" column was blank on both sheets. Good enough. An EKG had a
typewritten reading at its top: "Normalresting EKG." Even better.
But hadn't Dr. Huerta said
something about his father developing an abnormal rhythm in the hospital? Maybe
from the stress of the injuries. Everyone had heard of the patient with the
normal EKG who has a heart attack on the way out of the doctor's office.
He checked the handwritten
notes but couldn't read much of Dr. Harris's scribbling. The last entry was
fairly legible though.
Reviewed labs w pt. All WNL.
Final assess: excellent health.
Excellent health. Well, that
was a relief.
But damn it, doc, why
couldn't you have just said so in the first place? Would have saved me a whole
lot of trouble.
13
Jack fished the house key out of his pocket as he walked
down the slope toward his father's place. The good news was that the man was in
excellent health. The bad news was that Jack didn't know one damn thing more
than he had when he woke up this morning.
Nearing the house, he passed
a beat-up old rustbucket Honda Civic parked in the deep shadows on the grass
adjacent to the cul-de-sac. Hadn't been there when he passed by before.
On alert now, Jack slowed
his pace. Before rounding the rear corner of the house, he peeked first. He
froze when he saw the silhouette of someone squatting beside one of the trees
between his house and Anya's. Was this who'd been watching him?
Dropping into a crouch he
hugged the jalousied back porch and crept toward the figure. The wash of light
from the parking area of the cul-desac cast long shadows across the space, but
not enough light for Jack to make out his features. Could be one of those
weird-looking characters from the pickup truck this morning.
Then the figure flicked a
flashlight off and on-only for a second, but that was enough for Jack to
identify him.
He straightened and walked
up behind him.
"What's up, Carl?"
The man jumped and let out a
little yelp. He wore a lightweight, long-sleeved camouflage suit-if nothing
else, it protected him from mosquitoes-but a screwdriver instead of a hand
protruded from the right cuff. He looked up at Jack and held his left hand over
his heart.
"Oh, it's you. Tom's
son..." He seemed to be fumbling for the name.
"Jack."
"Right. Jack. Boy, I
gotta tell you, Jack, you shouldn't come up on a body like that. You just bout
scared the life outta me."
Jack noticed something
metallic with a silver finish on the grass before Carl. He couldn't tell what
it was, but he knew it was too bulky to be a gun.
"I've found that people
tend to get jumpy when they're doing something they shouldn't. You doing something
you shouldn't, Carl?"
Still in a squat, Carl
looked away. "Well, yeah, I guess so. Sorta. But not really."
Now there's a clear-cut
answer, Jack thought.
"And what would that
be?" When Carl hesitated Jack said, "Share, Carl. It's good to
share."
"Oh, all right. Might
as well tell you since you caught me in the act." He looked up at Jack.
"I'm doin a job for Dr. Dengrove."
"Who's he? Your
therapist?"
"Naw. He lives three
houses back, near the beginnin of the cul-desac. He wants me to catch Miss
Mundy in the act of waterin her stuff and all."
"Why would he want to
do that?"
"Because it's makin him
crazy that his grass and his flowers is all dead and wilty while Miss Mundy's
is all green and growin like a jungle."
"So you're supposed to
hang out here all night and catch her in the act?"
Carl nodded. "Sorta. He's
been after me for weeks, offering me money to do it, but I keep tellin him
no."
"Because you don't want
to get Miss Mundy in any trouble, right?"
"Well, yeah, there's
that, but also on account of how I gotta be up bright an early ever mornin for
my job. That don't stop him from offerin me more money, though. But I just kept
on tellin him no."
"'Kept'?" Jack
said. "I guess your being here tonight means he made you an offer you
couldn't refuse."
"In a way, yeah."
He motioned Jack down. "Here. Take a look at this."
Jack glanced around to see
If anyone else was lurking about. He sensed Carl was exactly what he seemed to
be: just a cracker working as a groundsman. But still...after having one of his
tires slashed by another cracker this morning, he wasn't taking any chances.
It looked like they were
alone out here, so Jack squatted beside Carl.
"What've you got?"
"Somethin really
cool." He picked up the metal object and held it toward Jack. "Dr.
Dengrove lent it to me. Ain't it somethin?"
Jack took it and turned it
over in his hands. A digital minicam. He noticed two slim wires trailing from
the casing.
"What do you think
you're going to do with this?"
"Get pictures. Dr.
Dengrove wants me to get a movie of Miss Mundy water in her stuff."
Jack shook his head.
"In this light, Carl, I'm afraid all you're going to get is a dark
screen."
"Nuh-uh. Nuh-uh."
Jack detected a certain note of nyah-nyah glee in Carl's tone as he reached
over and pressed a button above the camera's pistol-grip handle. "Take a
look."
Jack raised the viewfinder
to his eye and blinked as the walls of Anya's house and the grass and plants
surrounding it leaped into view.
"Whoa," he said.
"A night-vision camera."
He could make out the palms
and the larger flowers-not the colors, of course, because everything was either
green or black, just the shapes-along with her array of crazy lawn ornaments.
As he swung the view past a lighted window the image flared, losing all detail.
As he kept moving, the light from the window left a wavering smear across the
tiny screen that quickly faded, allowing him to make out details again.
"Yeah," Carl said.
"Almost like I'm runnin aBig Brother show, dontcha think?"
"I suppose."
Jack had never watched a
single episode. His own life was more interesting than any reality-TV show. He
couldn't resist tuning intoThe Anna Nicole Show now and again, but that
couldn't be classified as reality. At least he hoped not.
"These don't come
cheap," he said as he lowered the camera and turned it over in his hands.
"What's this Dr. Dengrove doing with it?"
"Ask me, I think he
bought it just so's he can catch Miss Mundy in the act. He don't seem to be
hurt in none for bucks, but he's sure hurt in bad for a green lawn." He
snorted a laugh at this little turn of phrase. "Hurtin so bad he's near
about crazy."
"Crazy enough to drop a
bundle on a night-vision video camera and hire you to run it?"
Carl grinned. "You
betcha."
Jack shook his head. Some
people. "I think Dr. Dengrove should get a life."
"Mostly I think he
eats. You should see the gut and butt on him-real pan-o-ramic."
"Pano-?"
"You know." He
spread his arms. "Like you told me: wide."
A panoramic butt...Jack
opened his mouth, then shut it again. Let it ride.
"He's like most of the
folks here, I guess. They got too much time on their hands so they worry about
all the wrong things. That's why I liked your daddy so much-"
"Like, Carl. He's still
alive, so you can still like him."
"Oh, yeah. Right. Well,
anyway, he didn't just sit around and complain. He kept busy. Always seemed to
have somethin to do, someplace to go."
"Speaking of going
place s...the accident happened out on a swamp road in the dead of night. You
have any idea what he was doing out there?"
Jack couldn't make out
Carl's expression but saw him shake his head.
"Nope. I go home at
night and I stay there."
"Where's home?"
"Got me a real nice
little trailer in a park just south of town. Me and the guy next door share a
satellite dish. For bout thirty bucks a month each we got us a zillion
channels. No reason to go out. And even if there was, you wouldn't catch me out
in the Glades at night. I told you: It's angry these days."
"Right. You did. But
you're out tonight-nice camo suit, by the way."
"These here are my
jammies."
"They're you, Carl. So
the plan is, you're going to sit out here all night and wait for Miss Mundy to
show?"
"Nup. Don't hafta. At
first I figured I'd just set the camera up and let her run, but that wasn't
going to work. Even if the battery would last, the memory wouldn't. But then I
came up with this real smart idea to solve all my problems. Look it here."
He held up a little circuit
board.
"What's that do?"
"It's a motion
detector."
This Carl was full of
surprises. "Did Dr. Dengrove give you that too?"
"Nup. Got it myself.
Took it out of a singin fish."
"I'm sorry," Jack
said, poking a finger in his right ear. "I thought you just said you took
it out of a singing fish."
"That's right. That's
what I did. Actually, I took it out of the board the fish sits on."
"You're losing
me."
"Big Mouth Billy
Bass...the singin fish. He bends out from the board and sings 'Don't Worry, Be
Happy,' and some other song I never heard before."
"Oh, right. I know what
you're talking about."
Jack had seen one in a store
once and couldn't imagine why anyone would want one. But a clerk had told him
he couldn't keep them in stock.
"Course you do. I
bought mine years ago. Was one of the first around here to get one. Hung it by
my front door and anytime someone came in it started singin. Pretty soon
everyone in the trailer park had one, but I was first." He shook his head.
"Haven't used it much lately, though. Got pretty tired of havin to listen
to those same two songs every time I walked by. So I let the batteries run out.
But just the other night I remembered that it had a motion detector inside that
set it off every time you passed." He waved the circuit board. "And
here it is."
"I get it," Jack
said. "You're going to attach the motion detector to the camera, and when
Anya comes out to water, you'll catch her."
"That's the plan. I
made sure I popped off the speaker, though." He chuckled. "Wouldn't
do to have that fish voice start singin 'Don't Worry, Be Happy' in the middle
of the night, now would it."
"I guess not. You think
this'll work?"
"Oh, it works. I
checked it out at home."
"You really think
you'll catch her?" Jack didn't like the idea of Anya getting in trouble.
"Nup. But don't tell
Dr. Dengrove that, and don't you go tellin her I'm doin this. I don't want her
mad at me."
"And you also don't
want her tipped off that she's being watched." He nudged Carl with his
elbow. "Won't you feel bad if you get her in trouble?"
"I would, cept that's
not gonna happen. Like I told Dr. Dengrove, all this work's gonna be for
nothin. We ain't never gonna catch Miss Mundy waterin."
"Why not?"
"Because she don't. All
she does is sit and watch TV all night. Just like everbody else. Reruns of
eitherMatlock orGolden Girls . That and the Weather Channel's all anybody round
here ever seems to watch." He licked his lips. "But there's somethin
else."
"What?"
"She looks dead when
she's watchin TV."
"How do you know?"
"I peeked in last night
while I was settin up, and I thought she was dead. I seen my share of dead
folks-I'm the one found Mr. Bass dead in a chair on his front porch awhile
back, and Miss Mundy looked just like him. Boy, was I glad to see her up and
about this mornin."
"Didn't you call
anyone?"
"Hey, I wasn't supposed
to be there. And if she was as gone as she looked, there wasn't nothin nobody
could do anyhow. Tonight I looked in again, just a few minutes ago, and it was
the same thing. Gwon. Look for yourself."
Jack shook his head. "I
don't think so."
"Gwon. See if I ain't
lyin. It's creepy, I tell you."
The last thing Jack needed
was to get caught acting like a Peeping Tom, but his curiosity was piqued. He
crept up to the lighted window that looked in on the front room and peeked
through the lower right corner.
Still in her kimono, Anya
lay back in her recliner, mouth slack, eyes half open and staring straight
ahead. ALaw and Order episode was playing-Jack recognized the music-but Anya
wasn't watching it. Her gaze was fixed on a spot somewhere above the TV. Oyv
was stretched across her lap, looking equally dead.
Jack watched her for signs
of breathing but she was still as, well, death. His comatose father showed more
signs of life. Jack straightened and was about to head around front to knock on
her door, when he saw her chest move. She took a breath. Oyv took a breath too,
at exactly the same time. Just one each. Then they went dead still again.
Okay. So she was alive.
Maybe it was all that wine-she must have put away three liters-that put her
into such a deep sleep.
Shaking his head, he
returned to where Carl waited.
"You weren't
kidding," he said. "But I saw her breathe. She's okay." He put a
hand on Carl's shoulder. "But you haven't explained how she can have such
a healthy lawn without watering."
"Magic," Carl
said, looking around as if someone besides Jack might be close enough to hear.
"You may think I'm loco, but that's the only explanation."
Jack remembered Abe telling
him about Occam's razor earlier in the year. It went something like: the
simplest, most direct explanation-the one that requires the fewest
assumptions-is usually the right one. Magic required a lot of assumptions.
Water didn't.
"I like water better as
an explanation."
"Nuh-uh. Not when you
look at where her green grass ends and the brown begins. It runs in a perfect
line twenty feet from her house all the way around in a big circle. And when I
say line, I mean it's got sharp edges. I know, cause I cut it. I may not know
much about lots a things, but I know you can't water like that."
Jack couldn't see the line
in the low light. He figured Carl was exaggerating. Had to be.
"I think it's them
doohickies she's got all over her yard," Carl said. "And that writin
on her walls."
"Writing?" Jack
didn't remember seeing anything on Anya's walls.
"Yup. You can't see it
lookin at it reglar, but-here." He handed Jack the camera again. "You
look through that while I put my flashlight on. Now I'm only goin to put it on
for a second so you look real hard."
Jack peered through the
viewfinder at the blank wall, avoiding the glare of the lighted window. A
section of the wall lit as Carl's flash beam hit it. And there, flaring to
life, a collection of arcs and angles and squiggles, very much like the symbols
on the homemade ornaments dotting her lawn.
And like the symbols he'd
found behind his father's headboard.
"Y'see em? Didja see
em?"
"Yeah, Carl. I saw
them." But what did they mean? He'd never seen anything like them. On a
hunch, Jack did a one-eighty turn. "Flash that on my father's place, will
you?"
When Carl complied, the same
symbols appeared.
Dumfounded, Jack lowered the
camera. "He's got them too."
"Hmmm," Carl said.
"They sure ain't doin nothin for his lawn. Wonder what they's for?"
"Let's do a little
research," Jack said.
With Carl in tow, Jack used
the same procedure to check out three other nearby houses, but their walls were
blank.
Returning to Carl's original
spot, he handed back the camera. That feeling of being watched was back and
stronger than ever. He scanned the area and spotted a bunch of dead leaves
scattered across the remains of his father's lawn. Hadn't noticed them before.
Not unexpected, though. He'd seen trees drop leaves in a hot dry spell.
While Carl attached the
motion detector to the camera-still no sign of a right hand, just a screwdriver
poking from the cuff-Jack turned toward Anya's house.
He had to admit he was
baffled. That strange old lady was the common factor here: She lived next door
to his father...visited him in the hospital...the symbols on her house were
also on his dad's place. Jack knew his father hadn't painted them on his
hospital bed. Not while comatose. So that left Anya.
She must have painted them
with some sort of clear lacquer so they'd be invisible. But what did they mean?
And what did she think she was accomplishing with them?
Maybe he should just ask
her. But then he'd have to explain how he knew.
He glanced around again and
noticed even more leaves on the lawn. Their number had doubled or tripled since
his last look. Where the hell were they coming from? They were small, maybe
three inches long; light from the parking area glinted off their shiny, reddish
brown surfaces. Odd...dead leaves usually lost their gloss.
Jack looked around for the
source but couldn't see any trees in the vicinity with that kind of leaf.
"There," Carl
said. Jack turned and saw him on his feet, dusting off his knees. He'd duct
taped the camera to the slender trunk of a young palm. "All set."
"Tell me something,
Carl," Jack said, jerking a thumb over his shoulder. "Where'd all
those leaves come from?"
Carl was facing the light
when he glanced past Jack. Jack saw his expression change from curiosity, to
puzzlement, to shock. He turned and looked and knew his expression must be
mirroring Carl's.
No grass was visible. The
leaves had multiplied till they now covered every square inch of the lawn.
"Those ain't
leaves," Carl said in a hushed, awed tone. "Them's palmettos!"
"What's a
palmetto?"
"A bug! A Florida
roach!"
"You mean like a
cockroach?"
"Yeah. But I can't
remember ever seein more'n half a dozen palmettos in one spot at the same
time."
Jack had encountered his
share of cockroaches-couldn't live in New York without seeing them-but never
this size. These were cockroaches on steroids. His skin crawled. He wasn't the
squeamish type, but these were big, and there had to be thousands of them, all
just a few feet away. If they started scuttling his way...
"What're they doing
here?" Jack said.
"Dunno. There ain't
nothin for them to eat on that lawn, that's for sure." He looked over his
shoulder. "Tell you what I'm gonna do. My car's parked in the shadows on
the other side of your daddy's place. I'm gonna head around the front of the
house and get to it that way."
"Why don't you just
shine your flashlight at them. Cockroaches hate light. Turn one on and they
disappear."
"Not Palmettos. Light
don't bother them ay-tall. They actuallylike the light." He turned and
took a step away. "Be back tomorrow."
That step seemed to trigger
the bugs. With a chittering whir of wings they took to the air in a cloud.
"Theyfly ?" Jack
shouted as he started backing away. "Cockroaches don't fly!"
"Palmettos do!"
Carl broke into a run.
Jack felt a surge of fear
and didn't know why. They were just roaches; not as if they were going to eat
him alive or anything. But his adrenaline was kicking in, pushing his heart
rate up a few notches. He quickened his backpedal.
At that instant the churning
mass of bugs turned as one and swept toward him in a swirling cloud. Jack
whirled and dashed after Carl.
"Here they come!"
he shouted.
Carl didn't even turn his
head; instead he put it down and upped his speed.
But neither stood a chance
of outrunning the bugs. The palmettos were too fast. They swirled around Jack,
engulfing him, clinging to his face, his arms, his hair, buzzing in his ears,
scratching at his eyelids, wiggling their antennaed heads into his nostrils, digging
at his lips. The clatter of their wings sounded like a million tiny hands
applauding. He felt countless little nips all over his exposed skin. Were they
biting him? Did they have teeth?
He swept a mass of them from
his face but they poured back in on him. He couldn't see and he was afraid to
open his mouth to breathe-they might crawl down his throat. He tore them again
from his face and stole a quick look ahead. The last thing he needed now was to
run into a wall or tree trunk and knock himself silly.
He saw that he'd reached the
corner of the house. Carl was still ahead, waving his arms wildly about, all
but unrecognizable under a swarming mass of palmettos, but still maintaining a
stumbling run. Jack cupped a hand over his mouth, took a quick, bug-free
breath, and shouted.
"Carl! Forget the car!
Go into the house!"
But Carl either didn't hear
the muffled advice or chose to ignore it. Jack had to close his eyes again
against the storm of palmettos. He angled to his right-the front door was
somewhere in that direction-and hoped he wouldn't trip over one of the front
porch chairs.
He slammed into a wall and
heard some of the bugs crunch against the siding. He felt to his left, found
the handle to the screen door, and pulled it open.
The front door-had he locked
it? He hoped to hell not. This being a gated community and all, why would he
bother? But he was a New Yorker, and New Yorkers never-
He fumbled around, found the
knob, turned it, pushed it open, and leaped inside. As he moved he was trying
to think of ways to kill the bugs that made it through the door with him, but
then he realized that wouldn't be necessary. They were peeling off of him at
the threshold line, like vacuum wrap being stripped from a piece of meat. Jack
stopped two feet inside the door and looked down at his arms, his clothes-not a
single bug had made it in with him.
He turned and stared through
the door as the screen banged shut. The palmettos were buzzing off in all
directions, scattering like...like the leaves he'd first mistaken them for.
What the hell was going on
here?
14
"Semelee! Semelee, answer me! Are you all
right?"
Semelee opened her eyes and
saw Luke's big face and hulking form hangin before her. No...hangin above her.
She shook her head, propped herself up on her elbows, and looked around.
"What happened?"
"You was us in the
shell, had it over your eye, and you was smilin and laughin and then all of a
sudden you yelled and fell back on the floor. What happened?"
Good question. Real good
question. But it was startin to come back to her now.
She'd spotted the old man's
kid, the special one, outside his daddy's house and followed him through
palmetto eyes to one of the buildings in the old folks' village. She'd been
hopin he'd show her that he had her other eye-shell but he surprised her by
breakin into the building. She tried to follow him inside but he closed the
window too quick. She peeked through the windows and saw him lookin at some
papers. She had no idea what they were and didn't care. She was lookin for her
eye-shell.
Pretty soon he was out
again. She followed him back to the house where he met someone outside. She
thought there was somethin familiar about the stranger but couldn't place him.
It was about then that she'd
started feelin the strain of controllin mindless little creatures like
palmettos with just one eye-shell. She had to make somethin happen, get the
special one into the house where she could have a look around for her eye-shell.
So she'd gathered as many as
she could and attacked. She'd been havin a good time chasin him and seein what
he was made of, and was gonna follow him into the house and give him a good
scare-maybe have the bugs gather in the air and spell out somethin spooky-so
he'd leave and let her search the place. But as she approached the front door
she started feelin strange, a little sick even. And then when she tried to
follow him inside it was like runnin into a wall. She was slammed back and
things got a little fuzzy after that.
"It's him," she
told Luke. "It's him made me sick in the hospital room this mornin."
"How you know
that?"
"Cause I felt the same
way just now tryin to follow him into his daddy's house."
She'd sensed he was special,
but she hadn't known just how special.
"You think he's got
your other eye-shell then?"
"I'm willin to bet on
it."
"What're we gonna
do?"
"I don't know."
She rolled over and buried her face in her arms. "Let me think on
it."
She had no experience in
this sort of thing. Sometimes she wished she didn't have to make all the
decisions. She was only twenty-three. Wasn't being special and having a destiny
enough? Did she have to lead too?
And worse was realizing that
the man, the special one, might not be herefor her...the way she'd been stopped
dead at his doorstep tonight made her suspect he might beagainst her.
People against her paid a
price, a high one, for treatin her bad.
Suzie Lefferts found that
out. In spades.
After Semelee had
experimented with her control powers for a while, she decided to put them to
the test. She chose prom night. No one had asked her to go, of course. Like,
big surprise. And guess who Jesse Buckler asked: big-haired Suzie Lefferts.
So Semelee had sat in her
bedroom-another thing she'd discovered was she didn't have to be on the beach
to fly with her birds-and got together a flock of big fat seagulls and followed
Jesse's car from Suzie's house to the prom. When they was both out of the car,
she arranged the gulls into a low circle. As each one got near them it let
loose with a big load of bird shit. Suzie started screamin as the big white
globs landed in her hair, on her dress. Same with Jesse. They both jumped back
in the car and drove away. Toward home, most likely. Semelee was sure Suzie
wasn't goin into the prom lookin like that.
Semelee lay on her bed and
near split her sides laughing. But she realized how a few of her gulls hadn't
done their thing yet, so she chased after the car, droppin big white splotches
all over Jesse's nice new wax job. He kept goin faster, trying to outrun them,
but that wasn't gonna happen. Then a particularly big glob landed on his
windshield. She saw the wipers come on but they just smeared it all over the
glass. That was when Jesse missed the curve and smashed into the utility pole.
The two of them'd been in such a rush to get away from the bombardment that
they never buckled up. Jesse wound up dead; Suzie survived but with a broke
neck. Doctors said she'd never walk again.
Semelee had been shook up
somethin terrible. She put her shells away, but only for a little while...she
couldn't stay away from them too long. But she used them only for flyin and
swimmin. She didn't try to control no more critters.
Leastways not while she was
still in Jacksonville.
But that was then. The now
Semelee thought the then Semelee was a dork. Don't make no sense to waste a
special power. You don't use it, you ain't special no more. You're just like
everybody else.
Besides, people tend to get
what they deserve.
Semelee lay on the deck a
moment longer, till the stink of the floorboards-the spilled drink and bits of
old food rubbed into them over the years-became too much. She climbed to her
feet.
"Well?" Luke said.
"You gotta plan?"
She told him the truth.
"No. Not yet, anyways. I'll figure something out." She turned to him.
"There was somebody with him tonight. Somebody I think I seen
before."
"Who?"
"If I knew that, I'd
tell you his name. But I know I seen him. It'll come to me."
"Well, in the meantime
we got unfinished business. That old man-"
"Yeah. We're gonna have
to finish him. That's number one on the list."
But how? She wished she
knew.
"If his kid is standin
in the way, I can take care of that. Me and Corley can go out and catch him
alone and-"
"No! Don't you touch
him!"
"Why the hell not? He's
in the way, and he's even makin you sick. He..." Luke squinted at her.
"Hey. You ain't sweet on him, are you?"
"Course not." She
couldn't let on about the connection she felt between her and the special one.
Luke might go off and do somethin really stupid. "But like I told you
before, we ain't killers. We do what needs to be done but we don't go past
that. This guy's only protectin his kin. Can't blame a body for that."
...protectin his kin...
Of course. It wasn't a
matter of him fightin against her, he was simply doin a son's duty. That
thought gave Semelee a surge of hope. Suddenly she felt better.
"I can too blame him if
he's gettin in our way and makin you sick and knockin you to the floor!"
"Just don't do anything
unless I tell you, okay? Are you listenin to me, Luke? Nothin until I say
so."
Luke looked away.
"Awright."
Semelee didn't know whether
she could believe him or not. She knew Luke would do anything to protect her,
whether she needed protectin or not. And that worried her.
15
After watching the cloud of palmettos disperse into the
night, Jack slammed the door and ducked into the rear bedroom. He peered
through the window in time to see a bug-free Carl getting into his old Honda
and roaring off. Obviously the bugs had lost interest in Carl as well.
Jack rubbed his arms and
face as he returned to the front room. He could still feel them crawling on
him. What had made them attack like that? And what had made them quit just as
suddenly?
What was happening around
here? Odd ornaments on lawns and behind beds, invisible symbols painted on
walls, flying killer cockroaches...what had he stepped into? It didn't smell of
the Otherness, but that didn't mean the Otherness wasn't lurking behind these
weird goings on.
Bigger question: Where did
Anya fit in? She was involved, no way around it. Whether peripherally or
centrally, he couldn't say. But she seemed to be on his father's side, and that
gave him a little comfort. Very little. If She weren't dead to the world in her
recliner, he might go over and ask her for an explanation.
And say what? I was just
attacked by palmetto bugs. Know anything about that?
Maybe she did, maybe she
didn't. He was pretty sure she didn't cause it. But at the very least she could
explain the symbols on her house and his father's, and how they'd got there.
Jack decided to let it go
until tomorrow.
He paced the front room a
couple of times. He was still feeling the after-buzz of the bug-induced
adrenaline surge. It had burned away the alcohol from the wine and he was
thirsty. Right now he needed a beer.
He grabbed a couple from the
fridge-getting low; he'd have to pick up some tomorrow-and settled himself in
front of the TV. After listening to the latest on T. S. Elvis, now drifting
south in the Gulf and threatening to become a hurricane, he surfed around until
he chanced upon his favorite Woody Allen film,Zelig , playing on TCM. He always
envied Zelig's talent for blending in with any group; it would be so handy in
Jack's fix-it business back home.
He sat and watched with the
lights on. He wasn't about to let any bugs sneak up on him.
Thursday
1
A soft clattering noise woke Jack. He lifted his head from
the pillow on the guest room bed and squinted at the clock. The red LED numbers
swam for a second, then came into sharp focus: 8:02.
He rolled out of bed and
went to the window for a peek outside. There he was: Carl, dressed in the same
shirt and work pants as yesterday, but this morning a set of electric hedge
clippers protruded from his right sleeve as he trimmed away at dry-looking
bushes that didn't need it.
Jack pulled on a pair of
shorts from his open gym bag on the floor and went outside.
Carl Scissor hands looked up
and jumped at Jack's approach. He shook his head and stopped the clippers.
"Mornin," he said.
"Man, that gang of palmettos was somethin last night, wasn't it. Never
seen nothin like that in all my born days. Never heard of it neither. How'd you
finally do with them?"
"Soon as I got inside
the house they just flew off. How about you?"
"Same. I was halfway to
my car when they suddenly lost interest. Pretty weird, huh?"
"Very weird."
"I had trouble sleepin.
I kept feelin like they was still on me." He shivered inside his flannel
shirt. "Gives me the willies just thinkin about it. And then my car
wouldn't start this mornin. My luck's runnin pretty bad and pan-o-ramic these
days."
Jack glanced over to where
Carl had set up his camera last night. The spot was empty now.
"How did the video
surveillance go?"
Carl shook his head.
"Nada. I come by real early this mornin to pick it up, you know, before
anyone else found it." He winked and jerked his thumb at a tattered
backpack sitting among his gardening tools. "I quick-checked the playback
but the only thing on it was me bendin over it and picking it up. Least ways I
know the motion detector's workin. Told Dr. Dengrove and he wasn't too happy,
but wants me to try again tonight."
"You going to?"
"Sure." He
grinned. "He wants to keep payin me, I'll keep settin up the camera. It's
his money, and I could sure use some of it."
"Fine, as long as you
don't catch Miss Mundy doing anything that'll cause her trouble."
"Told you: no worry
bout that."
"Speaking of Miss
Mundy..." Jack turned and looked at Anya's place. No signs of life there.
Considering how she looked last night..."maybe I should go over and see
how she's doing."
"Oh, she's doin fine.
She was up bright and early this mornin, waitin for a cab. It picked her up a
little before seven."
"Oh? Well, it's good to
know she's all right."
Jack wondered where she'd be
going at that hour. Hardly anything open then except the convenience stores.
The idea of a convenience
store got him thinking about coffee. He needed a couple of cups, but he didn't
feature the idea of winding all through Gateways twice, then back and forth
through the security gates, and hunting down a store in between. Oh, for the
Upper West Side where he could walk around the corner and have his choice of
coffee spots.
He remembered his father had
always been a big coffee drinker. He'd seen a can in the refrigerator.
"I'm going to make some
coffee," he told Carl. "Want some?"
Carl shook his head.
"Had some at home. Besides, I gotta keep lookin busy otherwise they'll lay
me off. Not a lotta gardenin to do when nothin's growin."
As Jack turned away he
glanced again at the clippers protruding from Carl's right sleeve. What was
holding them? Maybe he didn't want to know.
2
Back inside Jack pulled the can of coffee from the fridge.
Brown Gold-"100% Colombian Coffee." Sounded good. But he couldn't
find a coffee pot. Just a miniature French press. Jack remembered seeing a big
version of this in a restaurant where he once waited tables, but had never
worked one.
And he needed coffee. Now.
He flipped on his father's
computer, did a Google search for "French press," sifted through
sites about French newspapers and other sites wanting to sell him a press until
he found one telling how to use one: two scoops of coffee into a small press,
followed by near-boiling water at about 195-200 degrees-were they kidding? Stir
after one minute. After a total of three minutes, put on the cap and push the
plunger to the bottom.
Jack followed the directions
using boiling water-like he was going to check the temperature, right?-and
finally had his coffee. A damn good cup of coffee, he admitted, but who had
time for all this rigamarole every time you wanted some?
Retired people, that's who.
And his father was one of them.
He flipped on the Weather
Channel while he was waiting the required three minutes and learned that Elvis
was still drifting south in the Gulf. Its sustained winds had reached
seventy-eight miles per hour. That meant it had graduated from a tropical storm
to a Category I hurricane. Whoopee.
Coffee in hand, he searched
through the front-room desk until he found a couple of Florida maps. One was a
roadmap of the state, but the other was Dade County only. That was the one he
needed.
He found Pemberton Road and
followed it till it intersected with South Road...the site of the accident. Out
in the boonies. Way out.
Time for a road trip.
He was halfway through
refolding the map-these things never wanted to go back to their original
state-when a knock on the front door interrupted him. He found Anya, dressed in
a bright red-and-yellow house dress, standing outside with Oyv cradled in her
arms.
"Good morning,"
she said. Hot, steamy air flowed around her.
Jack motioned her inside.
"Come on in where it's cool. If you've got half an hour, I can make you a
cup of coffee."
She shook her head as she
stepped in. "No thanks, hon."
"Sure? It's made from
beans." He winked at her. "And on the label it says that no plants
were killed during the making of Brown Gold coffee."
She winked back. "I'll
have to try some another time." She gestured to the map in Jack's hand.
"Planning a trip?"
"Yeah. Out to where my
father got hurt."
"I'll come with
you."
"That's not
necessary." Jack had planned to do a little aimless reconnoitering after
checking out the intersection and didn't know if he wanted an old lady and a
yip-yip dog along.
"No trouble at
all," she told him. "Besides, you're a newcomer and I've lived around
here awhile. I can keep you from getting lost."
Well...on that score, maybe
she'd be more of a help than a hindrance.
"Okay. Thanks. But I
want to stop at the hospital and check up on my father before we head out to
the swamps."
"That can wait till you
get back," she told him. "I was just there."
"You were?" He was
touched by her devotion. "That's awfully nice of you. How was he?"
"When I left he was
just the same as yesterday and the day before."
"No progress?"
Bummer. "How long can this go on?"
"Not much longer,
hon," Anya said with a smile. "I have a feeling he'll be taking a
turn for the better soon. Just give it a little time. But as for exploring the
hinterlands, we should get started before it gets too hot."
She had a point. "Okay.
Just let me throw a few things together and I'll be right out."
"Oyv and I will meet
you at the car."
Jack figured he'd bring his
backup .38 along-just in case. And mosquito repellent. Lots of mosquito
repellent.
3
A voice had called him from his long dream of the war and
he'd responded. He was glad to leave the dream...so many dead men, with pierced
skulls and ruptured chests...staring at him with mournful eyes...
And then he was out of the
dream and awake. He sat up. He was in a bed, in a barrack. But where were the
other beds, the other soldiers? No one here but him.
Then he saw a little woman,
a thin bird of a woman in some sort of uniform, mopping the floor. He spoke to
her. Not volitionally. The words seemed to pop out of his mouth. He didn't even
hear them. But the woman did. Her head snapped up. Her eyes widened. Then she
hurried from the room.
Where am I? he wondered.
Was this still part of the
dream? If not, how did he get here?
4
Jack tried to draw Anya out during the trip but she wasn't
very responsive. He told her about the palmetto attack last night but she
didn't seem horrified or even concerned. Her only remark was that it was
"very unusual."
"How about you?"
he said, shifting the subject from him to her. He wanted to know more about
her. "Where are you from?"
"I moved here from
Queens," she said.
"I'd have thought you
came from Long Island."
"Well, I've lived there
too."
"What about your
childhood? Where'd you grow up?"
"Just about everywhere,
it seems." She sighed. "It was so long ago it seems like a
dream."
This was getting nowhere.
"Wherehaven't you lived?"
"On the moon." She
smiled at him. "So what's with all the questions?"
"Just curious. You seem
to know a lot about me and my father, and you two seem close, so don't you
think it's natural for me to want to know a little about you?"
"Not to worry. We're
not involved. We never will be. We're just friends. Isn't that enough?"
"I suppose it is,"
Jack said.
He supposed it would have to
be.
He took Pemberton Road
southwest with Anya following on the map and acting as navigator. Oyv lay
stretched out in the sun on the deck under the rear window. A drainage ditch
paralleled the road, sometimes on the left, other times on the right. Probably
served as a canal of some sort in normal times, but now it was mostly a
succession of intermittent pools of stagnant water.
"They're called borrow
pits," Anya said, as if reading his mind. "They're where the dirt and
limestone came from when they were building up these roads. This time of year
they should be filled with water, with turtles and little alligators and
jumping fish. Now..."
He could see what filled
them now: beer cans, Snapple bottles, old tires, and hunks of algae-encrusted
Styrofoam.
Coarse brown grass stretched
away to either side. He spotted three white-tailed deer-a doe and two
fawns-grazing near a stand of trees. As the car approached they leaped over a
bush and disappeared.
He saw a sign that
readPANTHER CROSSING .
"Panthers?"
Anya nodded. "They
still have some around here."
The idea of wild panthers
about was a little unsettling even when in a car. Imagine seeing that sign
while on foot.
"I've driven through
here with your father a couple of times. Every time we pass that sign he says
some rhyme about a 'panther' and 'anther.'"
Jack had to laugh.
"Ogden Nash!"
"Who?"
"He was a very clever,
down-to-earth poet. No airs about his stuff. Wrote a lot for kids. Dad loved
him."
Jack remembered his father's
nightly ritual of doling out a few of Nash's animal poems at bedtime.
He'd forgotten about those
times. He made a mental note to check the bookstores when he got home and see
what was still in print. Vicky would love Nash's wordplay.
He was jarred back to the
present as they passed a burnt-out area where some asshole probably had flicked
a cigarette out the window. Up ahead, a sign displaying a goofy-looking
alligator informed them that this was a "South Florida Water Management
District."
"Not much water to
manage at the moment," Jack said as the pavement ran out and became a
dusty, rutted dirt road bed.
"Even when there is
theymis manage it. All the development north of here, it's screwed up the
Everglades-screwed it royally."
Jack sensed anger in Anya's
voice. And something else...
"You sound as if you're
taking it personally."
"I am, kiddo. I am. No
decent person can feel otherwise."
"Pardon my saying so,
but isn't it really just a big swamp?"
"Not a swamp at all.
Swamps are stagnant; there's constant flow through the Everglades. It's a
prairie-a wet, saw grass prairie. This whole part of the state runs downhill
from Lake Okeechobee to the sea. The overflow from the lake travels all those
miles in sloughs-"
"Whose?"
"Slough. It's spelled
S-L-O-U-G-H but pronounced like it's S-L-E-W. The sloughs are flows of water
through these prairies that keep things wet. We're near the Taylor Slough here.
The Miccosukee Indians call the EvergladesPa-hay-okee : river of grass or
grassy waters. But look what's been done in the past fifty years: Canals have
been cut and farms have been put in the way, leaking all their chemicals into
the water-or should I say, whatever water reaches here. What the farms don't
take is 'managed' by so many canals and dikes and dams and levies and flood
gates that you've got to wonder how any of it gets where it naturally wants to
go. It's amazing anything at all has survived here. Just pure dumb luck that
the whole area's not a complete wasteland." She glanced at him.
"Sorry, kiddo. End of lecture."
"Hey, no. I learned
something. But I'd think that since Florida is just an overgrown sandbar, all
of the water in the sloughs would just seep into the ground."
"Sandbar? Where'd you
get that idea?"
"I heard somebody
describe it that way, so-"
She wagged a finger at him.
"He was talking out histuchus . Florida is mostly limestone. It's not an
overgrown sandbar; if anything, it's a huge reef. There's sand, sure, but dig
down and you hit the calcified corpses of countless little organisms who built
up this mound back in the days when all this was under water. That's why the
water runs downhill to the Everglades: Because it must."
"How'd you manage to
learn so much about these problems?"
"It's no secret. You
just have to read the papers. Supposedly the government is going to spend
billions to correct the mess. We'll see. Shouldn't have let it happen in the
first place." She glanced down at the map. "We should be coming up on
it soon."
"On what?"
"The
intersection." She pointed through the windshield. "There. That must
be it."
Jack saw a stop sign ahead.
He slowed the car to a stop a dozen feet before the intersection. The crossing
road was unmarked. Jack took the map from Anya and stared at the intersection
he'd circled.
"How do we know this is
the place?"
"It is," Anya
said.
"But nothing says
that's South Road."
"Trust me, kiddo. It
is."
Jack looked at the map
again. Not too many crossroads out here. This had to be it.
Leaving the engine running
to keep the AC going, he got out and walked to the stop sign. It sported a
couple of bullet holes-.45 caliber, maybe-but the rime of rust along their
ragged edges said they were old. A sour breeze limped from the west. He stepped
into the intersection and looked left and right. He checked the ground. Little
pieces of glass glittered in the dust. This was where it had happened.
"What are you hoping to
find?"
He turned and found Anya
approaching. Oyv trotted behind her, weaving back and forth as he sniffed the
ground.
"Don't know," he
said. "It's just that a lot of things don't add up, especially with the
timing and the assumption that my father ran a stop sign."
"I imagine a lot of
people do that out here. Look around. Here we are, midmorning on a Thursday and
not a car in sight. You think maybe there were more in the earlyA.M.
Tuesday?"
"No. I guess not. But
he was-is-such a by-the-book guy, and not a risk taker, that I can't see him
doing it. And I can't see what he was doing out here in the first place."
"Oh, I can tell you
that: He was driving."
Jack tried not to show his
irritation. "I know he was driving. But where to?" "To nowhere.
Many nights he had trouble sleeping, so he'd go out for a drive."
"How do you know?"
"He told me. Asked me
if I wanted to come along some night. I said he should include me out. I don't
know from insomnia. Like the dead I sleep."
So I noticed, Jack thought.
"Where did he go?"
"Out here. He said he
always took the same route. He'd drive with his windows open. He said he liked
the silence, liked to stop and look at the stars-you can see so many out
here-or watch an approaching storm. That would have been back when we had storms,
of course." She sighed. "Such a long while since we've heard thunder
around here."
"All right. So he's out
here on his nightly drive and-"
"Not nightly. Two,
maybe three times a week."
"Okay, so Monday night
or early Tuesday morning, he's out here and somehow he winds up in the middle
of an intersection when something else is coming along. Something big enough to
total his car and keep on rolling."
"A truck then. Sounds
as if he pulled out in front of a truck."
Jack looked up and down the
road. His father's Marquis had been hit on the right front fender. That
meant...
"A truck? It would have
to have been coming from the west...from the Everglades. Maybe he had a little
stroke or something."
"Dr. Huerta said his
brain scans showed no damage."
"Then it's a
mystery."
"I don't like
mysteries, especially when they involve someone I know. And speaking of
mysteries, I'm still trying to find out how someone reported the accident from
downtown Novaton-"
Anya shook her head.
"You call that a downtown?"
"Okay, from the local
supermarket-before it happened."
Anya peered at him through
her huge sunglasses. "How do you know when it happened?"
"From my father's
watch. It's cracked and broken, and the time on the face is something like
twenty minutes after the accident call. How is that possible?"
"Clocks," Anya
said with a shrug. "Who can trust them? One's set too fast, one's set too
slow-"
"My father was always a
tightass about having the right time."
"'Was,'" Anya
said. Shetsk ed and pointed a gnarled finger at him. "What do you know
about his watch lately?"
Jack looked away. She had
him there.
"Not much."
"Right. And-"
Oyv started barking. He was
standing at the edge of the ditch with his head down and his ears drawn back
flat against his head.
"What is it, my sweet
doggie?" Anya said. "What have you found?"
Jack followed Anya over to
where Oyv was still making his racket.
"Oh, my!" she
said.
Jack came up beside her.
"What?"
"Look at these
tracks."
Jack saw five-toed
impressions in the damp mud at the bottom of the ditch. They spanned about a
foot across. Whatever had made them was big. And pigeon-toed.
"Got to be a
crocodile."
Anya looked at him and made
a face. "Crocodile? The Florida crocodile likes brackish water. These are
alligator tracks. See that wavy line running between them? That was left by his
tail. Look at the size of those feet. This is abig alligator."
Jack did a slow turn. With
all the reeds and saw grass around, it could be hiding anywhere.
Now he knew how Captain Hook
felt.
"How big?"
"Judging from the size
of these prints, I'd say twenty feet long, maybe more."
Jack couldn't imagine how
she'd know that, but wasn't going to call her on it. This lady knew an awful
lot about Florida.
"Twenty-plus, huh? Why
don't we get back in the car."
"Not to worry. These
look old. See how the mud is dry? They were probably made days ago."
"That doesn't mean the
maker isn't still nearby."
The tiny Chihuahua was down
in the canal sniffing at the tracks. He showed no fear. Jack half expected him
to start cooing,Heeere, leezard, leezard, leezard...
His right hand drifted to
the small of his back where his little AMT backup rested in its holster under
his T-shirt. He wondered if a .38 caliber frangible would stop a gator that
size. Probably break up on its head. But he alternated them with FMJs in the
magazine. They might do some damage.
"Anyway, I've seen what
I came to see."
"Which was?"
"Nothing in particular.
I just thought I should come out and see where it happened."
What had he been hoping for?
A mystery-solving clue, like in the movies? It hadn't happened. Wasn't going to
happen. The whole thing was just a stupid accident.
But still...he wished he
knew who'd been barreling along South Road out of the swamp in something big
and heavy early Tuesday morning.
Back at the car, Jack played
the gentleman and held the door for Anya-and Oyv-as she settled herself in the
passenger seat, then he walked around to the other side. Physically he was
heading for the driver seat; mentally he was miles away, thinking about giant
gators and heavy rolling equipment. He was reaching for the door handle when
Oyv started barking again. He looked up and saw a red truck racing toward
him-forhim.
No time to get in the car so
he back-rolled onto the hood and got his feet up and out of the way just as the
truck sideswiped the Buick.
Jack's heart pounded. That
son of a bitch almost-
The truck...an old red
pickup he'd seen before. Jack couldn't make out who was driving but he'd bet he
wasn't pretty. Coughing in the trailing dust cloud, he slid off the hood,
pulled open the door, and jumped inside.
"What was that?"
Anya said as Oyv kept barking.
Thanks little guy, Jack
thought. Bark all you want.
"That was an attempted
hit and run."
He slammed the car into gear
and spun the tires as he started pursuit.
Anya looked worried.
"What do you think you're doing?"
"Going after
them."
"And if you catch them,
then what?"
"As the saying goes,
I'm going to kick ass and take names-in a very literal sense."
The bogus nurse in his
father's room yesterday had driven away from the hospital in that truck, and
now that truck had tried to drive into him. It wasn't big enough to cause the
damage that had befallen his father's Grand Marquis without totaling itself,
but it was connected. Oh, yes. Definitely connected.
Jack followed the pickup's
dust cloud along Pemberton. He was gaining on it when it suddenly braked and
hung a hard right. Jack skidded to a halt, almost missing the turn. He nosed
onto a pair of sandy ruts that curved to the right. He accelerated but the dust
was so thick that he missed the path and slid off into the brush. It took a few
back-and-forth maneuvers to get moving again, and by the time he made it back
to the road-that pair of ruts was nothing more than an arc that curved back to
South Road-the truck was nowhere to be seen.
Jack drove to the
intersection and got out. He scanned the roads up and down in search of a
tell-tale dust cloud, but saw nothing. The truck had either slowed or pulled
off the road to hide in the brush.
Frustration set his teeth on
edge as he swung back into the driver seat. He pounded once on the steering
wheel.
"Not to worry,"
Anya said. "I have a feeling you'll be seeing that truck again."
"So do I," Jack
said. "That's the problem."
5
Jack needed to pick up some beer and a few munchies. Anya
said she needed to do some food shopping as well. So, following her directions,
he drove them to the Publix in downtown Novaton. On the way he saw a number of
homeless types begging on the sidewalks. He hadn't noticed them on past trips
through.
A fellow with a cauliflower
nose and a lumpy face that looked like he'd stuffed his cheeks with marbles
stood near the door. He held a Styrofoam cup and shook the change within,
looking for more.
As Jack slowed, trying not
to stare but wondering if this guy was related to the two in the pickup, Anya
grabbed his arm and pulled him through the automatic door.
"Give him nothing. His
type are up to no good."
Inside, he and Anya split, she
rolling her cart toward the produce section while he headed for the snack
aisle. There he found more varieties of fried pork rinds and pork cracklins
than he'd ever imagined possible. He'd heard of them but never tried any. He
passed them by and stocked up on healthier fare-tubes of cheese Pringles, one
of his household staples. On his way back past the pork rinds he gave in to an
impulse and picked up a bag. He'd try anything once. Couldn't tell Gia, though.
She'd be grossed out.
He found the beer section on
the left side of the store where it took up the whole wall. But nowhere on that
wall could he find Ybor Gold. He saw a stock boy who didn't look old enough to
drink stacking twelve-packs of Bud Light in the cooler; he had late acne and an
early goatee. His brown hair was gelled into shiny spikes. Jack asked him where
they hid the Ybor Gold.
"I don't think we carry
that one anymore," he said.
Damn. He'd enjoyed those two
he'd had on the way down.
"Why not? It's a local
beer."
"That's not local. It's
made in Tampa."
Exasperated, Jack started
waving his arms. "If you can stock Sapporo Draft from the other side of
the world, how come you can't stock something from the other side of the
state?"
"Wait a minute,"
the kid said. "Come to think of it..."
He went over to the imported
section, shuffled some stock around, and pulled out a six pack of Ybor Gold. He
held it up, grinning.
"Knew I'd seen this
somewhere."
"My hero," Jack
said.
"There's one more back
there. Do you-?"
"Sold!"
As the kid put the two six
packs in the cart, Jack handed him a five-dollar bill.
"Naw, that's
okay," he said. "Just doing my job."
Jack shoved it into the
breast pocket of the kid's shirt. "Yeah, but you deserve a raise."
He hunted up Anya and
followed her around as she picked out what she wanted. This involved playing
touchy-feely with almost every piece of fruit in the store. Finally she was
done and they checked out. Jack qualified for an Express Lane and cooled his
heels by the door as her order was rung up.
Out in the parking lot, he
was loading everything into the trunk when he spotted a battered red pickup
parked against the far curb half a block down. Anya and Oyv were already in the
car; it was running with the AC on. Jack leaned in the driver door.
"Can you spare a few
minutes?" he said. "I want to check something out."
She glanced at her watch.
"Don't be too long. I'd like to stop in on your father before we head
home."
That was on Jack's to-do
list as well. But first...
He angled across the parking
lot, then crossed the street. As he approached the truck-no question now that
it was the same one-he noticed a slim young woman with a dark complexion and
wild hair a startling silver white. She leaned against a nearby wall. She wore
white Levis and a tight black vest over a long-sleeved white shirt buttoned up
to the collar.
He stared at her. Something
familiar about her. Not the hair, but that face, those black eyes...
And then he knew. Stuff that
hair under a black wig, put her in a nurse's uniform, and she'd be the mystery
woman who'd fled his father's room yesterday.
First she's a brunette in
the hospital, now she's white haired and hanging out on the street. What the
hell?
Next to her stood a hulking
man Jack recognized as the one who'd ferried the mystery nurse away yesterday.
The woman's eyes met his and
he saw an instant of recognition there. She hid it immediately and slid her
gaze off him, but he'd caught it.
Jack stepped back and edged
toward the truck. The guy with the bulging forehead was leaning against it.
Couldn't forget him. He'd been driving when Jack's tire was slashed. Had he
been driving an hour ago?
Time to find out. Time to
see if he could provoke a little something out of this clown.
Jack lidded his anger and
sidled up to him. The man's misaligned eyes were fixed on the crowd. Jack got
his attention by giving his right shoulder a none-too-gentle shove. The guy
bumped against the truck's passenger door and whirled on Jack.
"Hey! What-?"
Whatever he was going to say
never got out. Jack saw his eyes widen with recognition and knew he had his
man.
"Almost nailed me out
there, didn't you," Jack said, stepping closer and getting in his face.
"Luke?" the guy
said in a high, quavering voice.
Jack gave him another shove.
"Whose bright idea was that? Yours? Or somebody else's?"
"Luke?" he said
again, louder this time, his eyes darting back and forth. "Luke!"
Jack was about to give him
another shove when the big burly guy who'd been next to the woman came up. His
little pig eyes fixed on Jack.
"What's goin on?"
"This your truck?"
"What if it is?"
"It sideswiped me out
in the boonies a little while ago."
Luke shook his head.
"No way. It's been sittin here all day. Ain't that right, Corley?"
Corley missed a beat, then
nodded his misshapen head. "Yeah. That's right. Here all day."
"Really?" Jack
stepped over to the right front fender and ran his hand along the
beige-streaked dent there. "I bet if the police compare the paint on these
scrapes to the paint on my car they'll come up with a perfect match."
He had no intention of
getting the cops involved, but they didn't know that.
Luke's eyes shifted from the
scrapes, to Corley, to Jack. "What if it does? Don't prove nothin."
"I think the cops will
see it differently, and then I won't be the only one wanting to know why you
tried to run me down."
"Somebody tried to run
you down?" said a woman's voice behind him.
It was the girl.
"Do I know you?"
Jack said.
She stuck out her hand.
"My name's Semelee. What's yours?" Her dark eyes were alive with
interest as she looked at him.
"Jack," he said as
he shook her hand. Her skin was soft, like a baby's. He nodded his head toward
Luke and Corley. "You connected to them?" He knew the answer but
wanted to see how she'd respond.
"They're kin. You think
they tried to run you down?"
"I don't know who was
driving, but I know it was that truck."
Her expression darkened.
"Oh, it was, was it?" She turned and glared at her "kin."
"Get in the truck."
Luke spread his hands.
"But Semelee..."
"In the truck,"
she said through her teeth."Now!"
The two of them moved off
like whipped dogs. If nothing else, Jack had learned who ruled the roost.
She was all smiles when she
turned back to him. A nice smile. The first he'd seen. It lit up her face and
made her almost pretty.
"I'm sure it was just
an accident. Those boys drive a little crazy sometimes. Why don't I buy you a
drink and we can talk it over. Maybe-"
"What were you doing in
my father's room?"
"Your father?" Her
brow furrowed. "I don't think I-"
"His hospital room. You
were in it yesterday, wearing a wig and dressed like a nurse."
She snapped her fingers.
"Iknew I seen you before."
Yeah, right. She'd known him
the instant she saw him.
"What were you doing
there?"
"Oh, that. I been
thinkin bout becomin a nurse, so I dressed up like one and went to the hospital
to see what it was like. It didn't work out. Made me feel kinda sickish. I
guess nursin ain't for me."
"I guess it
ain't."
Good story. It fit nicely
with what he'd seen, but Jack wasn't buying a word.
She smiled again. "Now,
about that drink...?"
He hesitated. A little face
time with her and he might get a handle on what was going on between his father
and Semelee and her "kin." But he had Anya back in the car and he
hadn't seen his father yet today. But maybe he could catch her later.
"Have to take a rain
check," he told her. "Got to get to the hospital."
"Oh, yeah. Your daddy.
Is he bad sick?"
"He's been
better."
Another battered pickup,
this one blue, pulled up beside the first. For a moment he thought it was
filled with migrant workers, but then Jack saw their misshapen heads and
bodies. If they were any sort of workers, they looked like they might be extras
for Wes Craven if he was doing a new sequel toThe Hills Have Eyes . He
recognized the marble-cheeked guy from the Publix. All the funny-looking street
people he'd seen begging on his trip through town were gathered in these two
trucks.
"Well," Semelee
said, "we'll try for that drink some other time."
Jack tore his eyes away from
the blue truck. "We sure will. When?"
"Whenever you
want."
"How do I reach
you?"
"Don't worry." Her
smile broadened as she opened the passenger door of the pickup and climbed in.
"Just say the word and I'll know."
Something in her tone sent
an icy trickle down Jack's spine.
6
Jack walked into the hospital room and froze just inside
the door. His father, dressed in an open-back hospital gown with little booties
on his feet, was sitting up on the edge of the bed eating a plate of green
Jell-O.
"Christ! Dad...you're
awake!"
His father looked up. He
looked fresh and rested. He might have been sitting on his front porch having a
gimlet.
"Jack? You're here?
You?"
His blue eyes were clear and
bright through his steel-rimmed glasses. His hair was damp and combed, his face
looked freshly scrubbed. If not for the facial bruises and the bandage on the
side of his head, there was no evidence that he'd been seriously hurt.
"Yeah. Me." He
shook his head. "I can't believe this. Last night you were still
level-seven coma and today..."
"They told me one of my
sons had been visiting. I assumed it was Tom. But come to think of it, I seem
to remember hearing your voice."
"I was talking to you a
lot."
"You were? Maybe that's
what brought me out. I couldn't believe you were here so I had to see for
myself." He sighed and looked at Jack. "Is this what I have to do to
get you to visit?"
"Such a thing to
say!" Anya said, bustling around Jack and heading for the bed. She'd hung
back at the doorway, making Oyv comfortable, she'd said, and had waved Jack
ahead. "Be nice, Thomas."
"Anya!" his father
said, eyes lighting at the sight of her. "What are you doing here?"
"Jack brought me. We've
become fast friends." She took his right hand in both of hers. "How
are you?"
"I'm fine. Better every
minute, especially since they took that catheter out of me." He shuddered.
"That's not something-"
"There she is!"
said a heavily accented woman's voice. Jack turned and saw a thin little
Hispanic woman, dressed like a nurse's aide, standing next to the hulking form
of Nurse Schoch, pointing at Anya. "She's the one I told you about."
Nurse Schoch, looking as
stern as ever, glanced down at the aide and spoke in a rumbling voice.
"You want to tell me again what you saw?"
"I was in the bathroom,
washing the sink, when she come in and hold his hand and say, 'Okay, Tom.
You've been asleep long enough. Today's the day you get up.' That's what she
say."
Anya laughed and waved a
hand at her. "How do you know I don't say that to him every day?"
The little woman shook her
head. "Right after she leave, he sit up in bed and ask me if he miss
breakfast."
"Did I?" his
father said, smiling. "I don't remember. I was a little groggy after I
first woke up, but I'm fine now." The smile faded. "So many things I
don't remember. They tell me I had an accident but I don't remember a thing
about it."
The aide was still pointing
at Anya."Bruja!"
Jack knew enough Spanish to
know she was calling Anya a witch.
"Enough of that,"
Schoch said. "Go clean something. Git."
After one last fearful look
at Anya, the little woman scurried off. Nurse Schoch stepped over to his
father's side and took his blood pressure. She nodded and wrote on a clipboard.
"How am I doing?"
he said.
"Fine." Schoch
smiled and, surprisingly, it didn't break her face. "Amazingly fine. Dr.
Huerta's coming up to see you."
"Who's he?"
"She. She's been taking
care of you since you were brought in to the ED."
"Well, she'd better get
here fast, because as soon as I finish this Jell-O, I'm going home."
Jack and Schoch began
talking at the same time, telling him he couldn't, that he'd just had a serious
injury, and so on and so on. Didn't faze him.
"I don't like
hospitals. I feel fine. I'm going home."
Jack recognized the note of
finality in his father's voice. He'd heard it as a kid. It meant Dad had made
up his mind and that was that.
"You can't,"
Schoch told him.
He peered at her through his
glasses. "I guess I'm a little confused. When did I become the hospital's
property?"
Schoch blinked and Jack
guessed no one had ever asked her that.
"You're certainly not
the hospital's property, but you became itsresponsibility when you were wheeled
through the doors."
"I appreciate
that," he said. "Really, I do. And from the way I feel right now,
you've all done a wonderful job. But I no longer need a hospital, so I'm going
home. Where's the problem?"
"The problem,
Dad...," Jack said, feeling his patience slipping. His father was acting
dumb. "The problem is that you had a serious accident-"
"So I'm told. Can't
remember a thing about it so I guess I'll have to take people's word for
it."
"It happened,"
Jack told him. "I've seen the car. Totaled."
He winced. "Not even a
year old." He shook his head. "I wish I could remember."
Jack watched his father's
expression. Was that fear in his eyes? Was he afraid? Of what?
"That's not the
point," he told him. "The point is you've been in a coma for three
days and how do we know you won't lapse back into one in the next minute or
hour or day?"
His smile was thin. "We
don't. But if I do, you can bring me back here." He held out his arm-the
one with the IV running into it-to Schoch. "Would you remove that,
please?"
She shook her head.
"Not without doctor's orders."
"Okay, then. I'll do it
myself."
"Christ, Dad,"
Jack said as his father began peeling off the tape that held the line in place.
"All right, all
right," Schoch said. "I'll take it out for you. Just let me get a
tray."
As she lumbered out, Jack
looked at Anya. She hadn't said a word through all this. He looked at his
father who had lowered the top of his hospital gown and was peeling off the
cardiac monitor leads.
"Can't you convince
him?" he said to her. "I obviously can't."
Oyv popped his head out of
her big straw bag as Anya shook hers. "I should be making his decisions?
He's not crazy."
"He's acting
crazy."
"He wants to leave the
hospital because he feels fine. What's so crazy about that?"
Thanks for the help, he
thought. He'd feel a lot better if his father would stay just one more day, to
make sure his condition was stable. He had to find a way around his reckless
stubbornness.
Anya was staring at him.
"Switch places. What would you do in his situation?"
I'd get the hell out of here
and go home, he thought. But he couldn't say that.
"I'm lots younger
and-"
Oyv dropped back down into
the bag as an anxious looking Nurse Schoch came charging into the room,
carrying a tray. She stopped at the foot of the bed and shook her head as she
stared at the cardiac leads scattered across the sheet.
"I figured that was
what you were doing when the monitor flatlined, but I had to be sure."
A few minutes later, Dad had
a gauze patch taped over the spot where the IV had been. He stood and looked
around.
"All I need now are my
clothes."
"They had to throw them
out." Here was the angle Jack had been looking for. "They were too
bloody to keep. You know what? Why don't you hang out here one more night and
I'll come back first thing in the morning with some of your clothes. How does
that sound?"
"Terrible. I'll wear
this if I have to."
Jack thought of refusing to
drive him home, but what would that accomplish? All he had to do was call a
cab.
He caught a glimpse of his
father's skinny white buttocks through the back of the hospital gown as he
walked to the tiny closet.
"Well, will you look at
this!" he said as he opened the door. He held up a white golf shirt and
tan Bermuda shorts. "Just what the doctor ordered."
"Somehow I doubt
that," Jack said. He looked at Anya. "Where'd they come from? You
were here this morning. Did you-?"
"You think I go
snooping in closets?"
His father headed for the
bathroom. "I'll be out in a minute."
"Dad, those aren't your
clothes."
"I'm claiming them for
the moment. I'll bring them back tomorrow."
I give up, Jack thought. I'm
licked. He's going home.
While he was changing, Anya
puttered around the room, opening and closing drawers, filling a little plastic
bag with the soaps, mouthwash, toothpaste, and other necessities the hospital
had supplied.
"No sense in letting
any of this go to waste," she said. "He's paid for it, after
all-probably through the nose, if I know hospitals."
Jack watched as her hand
darted behind the headboard. She pulled something out and quickly shoved it
into the plastic bag. He didn't see it, but he could guess what it was. She was
taking back her painted tin can totem.
Dad, still wearing his
hospital booties, stepped out of the bathroom and spread his arms to show off
his new duds.
"Would you believe it?
A perfect fit."
"Imagine that."
Jack looked at Anya but she
wouldn't make eye contact. What was her part in all this? Was that nurse's aide
right? Could Anya have had something to do with his father's miraculous
recovery? That would be strange, but he was becoming used to strange.
"Are we ready?"
his father said. "Then let's go!"
7
On the ride back to Gateways-Jack driving, his father in
the passenger seat, Anya and Oyv in the back-he told his father what he knew
about the accident, including the anonymous call to the police that appeared to
have been made before the crash.
"I wish I could
remember," he said. "The last thing I recall is leaving the house and
driving out the front gate. And that's it. What happened during the drive? Why
can't I remember?"
"It's called retrograde
amnesia," Jack told him. "You can't retrieve memories of events right
before you got hit. There's a good chance over time your brain will sort them
out, but then again, it may never."
His father stared at him.
"How do you know so much about it?"
Oops. "A sort of
lecture I listened to once. Very interesting."
The speaker had been Doc
Hargus. Jack had been knocked cold in a fall from a fire escape. After coming
to he'd known enough to get to Hargus to have his scalp sewn up, but couldn't
remember why he'd been on the fire escape in the first place. The doc had
explained about post-traumatic memory loss, both antegrade and retrograde. It
had taken a few days, but Jack finally remembered how he'd got there. And who'd
shoved him off.
"Well, I hope mine
comes back soon. As for the accident being reported before it happened..."
He shook his head. "Impossible. So we can forget that. Somebody's watch
was way off. That's the only explanation. Wasn't it Sherlock Holmes who said,
'When you eliminate the impossible, whatever remains, however improbable, must
be the truth'?"
Jack was sure he'd heard
Basil Rathbone state that a hundred times.
"Yeah, I think
so."
Except, considering the
course of Jack's life these past months, the impossible was not as easy to
eliminate as he'd once assumed.
After Jack parked the car in
the cul-de-sac, his father insisted-over his son's protests-on helping carry
Anya's groceries into her house. They left her there with a promise to return
for cocktail hour.
As he preceded Jack into the
front room of his house, he said, "I guess I should be saying, Boy, it's
great to be home. But I can't. I may have been in that hospital bed for days,
but I feel as if I left here only a few hours ago."
He lowered himself into the
recliner and stared into space. Jack watched him and realized he was scared.
He'd never seen his father scared, or imagined he could be. He knew he couldn't
leave him like this.
"I'm going to stay a
few days," he told him. "If that's all right with you."
His father looked up at him.
"You? Acting like you're a member of a family? What gives?"
The remark stung, and that
must have shown in Jack's face because his father's voice abruptly softened.
"I'm sorry. I shouldn't
have said that. I'm glad you're here. You don't know how glad. It's
just..."
"Just what?"
"Kate's funeral. Why
weren't you there? I still can't believe you didn't show up."
"I couldn't."
"Like hell. A hundred,
maybe two hundred people showed up. Mothers bringing the children she'd
treated, people she'd treated as kids bringing their own children. All those
strangers made it to her funeral, but not her own brother. She touched a lot of
lives in her life, Jack, but yours most of all. She practically raised you. You
brought out the nurturer in her. When you needed changing or needed to be sung
to sleep, she'd take over, she'd say she'd do it. She'd all but fight with your
mother to take care of you."
"I know," Jack
whispered through a constricting throat. "Don't you think I'd have been
there if it had been possible-any way possible?"
"Then why weren't
you?"
How could he tell him it was
because BATF and FBI people were there too? Taking pictures. Because of the way
Kate died, and the events leading up to and connected to her death, they'd
camped outside the funeral home and cemetery with their telefoto lenses. Jack
had spotted them just as he was about to turn into the funeral home parking
lot. He'd driven on. He couldn't let them take his picture and have it end up
pinned to a corkboard wall with a question mark beneath it. Who he was was a
question he didn't want them even asking, let alone answering.
"It wasn't...it just
wasn't possible."
"Why not? Were you in
jail? In a hospital in a coma? Those reasons I'll accept. Anything
less..."
"I was there. I
couldn't make it to the ceremonies, but I visited her grave after the
funeral."
"If you could show up
then, why couldn't you show up before?"
Jack remembered the anger
he'd felt at spotting the feds outside the funeral home. But it had been an
anger tinged with guilty relief. Their presence meant he wouldn't have to face
Kate's kids, her ex-husband, and his father. Because there'd be too many
questions about Kate's last days and he couldn't tell them anything because
there was so much she hadn't wanted them to know. But most of all because he
felt in some ways responsible for her death. In her last moments he'd soothed
her while she bled, held her cooling hand after she died.
"Through the whole
ordeal," his father said, "everyone kept asking if the long-lost Jack
would show, and I said of course you would, especially since she'd just been
taking care of you while you were sick."
"You know about
that?"
"She called Ron the
night she died...told him. She was still looking after you, even after you'd
grown up." Tears filled his eyes. "She brought Kevin and Lizzie down
for Easter week last spring. I didn't know it would be the last time I'd see
her alive. I was supposed to go up and stay with her awhile in July. Instead I
went up for her funeral." His voice hovered on the edge of a sob. "I
miss her, Jack. Even though I moved down here we still talked. We phoned each
other two or three times a week."
Jack took a step closer. He
reached out a hand to put on the old man's shoulder, hesitated halfway
there-would he shrug it off?-then pushed past the doubt. He gave his father's
bony shoulder a gentle squeeze.
"Kate was a wonderful
person, Dad. You can always be proud of her. You and Mom deserve a lot of
credit for that."
He looked up at Jack.
"I wonder. Kate turned out great, but you and Tom...where is he,
anyway?"
That reminded him: He should
call Tom and let him know Dad was out of the coma. Not that he seemed too
worried. He'd yet to call for an update.
"He couldn't make it.
He told me he's tied up with some legal thing in Philly."
He shook his head.
"Figures. Tom's always got something else to do; we all know who's number
one in his life. And then there's you...the vanished son. I suppose your mom
and I deserve credit for the two of you as well as Kate, don't we."
He sounded so bitter. Maybe
he had a right to be. Jack started to slide his hand off the shoulder but his
father grabbed it and squeezed.
"I'm sorry, Jack. I had
to let this out. It's been eating at me since the funeral. And since you never
returned my calls..."
"Yeah, sorry about
that." Again, he hadn't known what he could say.
"...I never had a
chance to get this off my chest. I still don't understand, and I guess I never
will. You're holding back on me. I don't know why but I hope someday you'll
tell me the real story." He released Jack's hand and slapped his palms
against his thighs. "Until then, I'm through with this kind of talk. It's
putting me in a funk."
He sat in silence for a
moment, Jack standing beside the chair, trying to come up with something to
say. But he didn't have to. His father broke the silence by rising from the
chair and heading for the kitchen.
"I'm going to have a
beer. Want one?"
"Do you think you
should? I mean, you were in a coma this morning and-"
"Do you want one or
not?" he snapped.
If you can't beat him, Jack
thought, join him.
"Yeah, okay. Pop me
one."
His father opened the
refrigerator door and pulled out an amber bottle. "What's this?"
"Oh, that's an Ybor.
It's a Florida brew I discovered."
His father gave him a hard
look. "What did you do? Move in while I was out cold?"
"Well, Anya said you'd
want it that way."
"She did, did
she?"
These mood swings between
friendly and hostile were getting to be a bit too much. "Look, if you want
me to move out-"
"I wouldn't hear of
it."
He popped the caps off a
pair and handed one to Jack. They clinked the bottles.
Jack said, "To letting
bygones be bygones?" At least for now.
"Not always as easy as
it sounds, but I'll drink to that." His father took a sip and then studied
the label. "Ybor Gold, ay? I like it."
Jack took a long pull.
"Yeah. But they should have named it Ygor Gold. Then they could have had
this sneaky-looking hunchback on the label. Would have been very cool."
His father stared at him.
"Now why on earth would you think of that? Why would anyone think of that?
You know, I used to worry that all those monster movies you watched as a kid
would warp you. Now I can see they did. I swear they did."
"Hey, I've watched lots
of romantic films too, Dad, but they didn't make me romantic. And I know I must
have seen hundreds, maybe a thousand comedies, but they didn't make me funny. I
haven't committed stand-up yet and, trust me, I'mnot the life of the party."
His father laughed for the
first time since he'd come out of the coma. That was a good thing.
8
They hung around the front room for about twenty minutes
or so, sipping their brews and making small talk, then his father dozed off in
his recliner. At first Jack worried that he'd lapsed back into coma, but he
responded when Jack shook his shoulder. He left him sleeping in his chair and
went outside.
Through the late afternoon
haze he spotted Carl working three houses down. When he saw Jack he hurried
toward him across the dry grass. A small garden spade protruded from his right
sleeve.
"I heard about your
daddy," he said, flashing a yellow grin. "Real glad he's okay. That's
pan-o-ramic!"
"Sorry?"
He shrugged. "I just
like the word. Anyways, I'm glad he's back."
"Thanks, Carl. He's
napping now."
"Good. Real good. Looks
like the list don't get more pan-o-ramic."
Wishing he'd never uttered
that word, Jack said, "What list?"
"The list of Gateways
folks who've gone before their time-not that 'before their time' means a whole
helluva lot round a place like this. Funeral home waiting rooms is what they
is."
"I'm not following
you."
"Had a bunch of strange
deaths real recent like."
Jack felt a crawly sensation
in his gut. "Like what? Hit and runs?"
"Nup. Nothin like that.
I mean strange. Like Mrs. Borger bein attacked by about a dozen pelicans last
year-right before Christmas, it was. Pecked her to death. I hear tell one of
them bit into her neck and there was blood shootin everwhere. Been in Florida
all my life and I ain't never heard of no one bein attacked by no pelicans.
Then back in March there was Mr. Leo, all bitten up by a bunch of spiders.
Brown recluses, they say." He shuddered. "If I was ever onFear Factor
, that's what would set me to runnin. Anyways, Doc Harris said he's never heard
of someone gettin bit more'n once, but there you go. Poor old guy died in the
hospital."
"Jeez."
"Then just last June,
Mr. Neusner trips and falls into a whole nest of coral snakes. He was DOA like
the others. Come to think of it, your daddy was the only accident that made it
to the hospital alive. I guess that's a good sign."
"Let's hope so."
"Funny thing about Mr.
Neusner and the coral snakes. We got a sayin down here: 'red touch yellow-kill
a fellow.'"
"What's that
mean?"
"Well, there's coral
snakes, which got red, yellow, and black stripes, and they's poisonous as all
get out. And then there's the scarlet snake and the scarlet king snake which
got similar stripes but they're harmless. The way you tell 'em apart is by the
order of their stripes."
"You mean people hang
around long enough to check out the stripe order?"
"Sure. If it's got a
red stripe next to a yellow stripe, it's a coral snake. If it don't, then
you're okay. You may get bit, but you won't get poisoned." He pronounced
it "pie-zund."
Jack said, "I'm a city
boy. I see any snake, striped or plaid, I'm gone."
He much preferred dealing
with human snakes than the legless kind.
"But the thing
is," Carl added, "I seen one of them snakes, the one Mr. Neusner
stomped on before he keeled over. Don't know bout the other ones that bit him,
but this one didn't have no red touchin yellow. It shouldn't have been
poisonous, but it was." He shook his head. "Kinda scary when somethin
you always depended on turns out not to be true anymore."
Tell me about it, Jack
thought. He'd seen the pins kicked from under more than one Cherished Truth
lately.
"You said there was a
nest of them? Right here at Gateways? How? The place looks
so...manicured."
"I can't figure that
one neither. I run the mower over that spot every week and I ain't never seen
no snake nest. I think a buncha them just coiled theirselfs all together durin
the night and was still there when Mr. Neusner come by like he did every mornin."
Carl looked away, toward the Everglades. "Almost like..."
"Almost like
what?"
"Like they was waitin
for him."
Jack's gut crawled again.
"You don't really believe that, do you?"
A shrug. "Just a
thought."
"I'm having a thought
too," Jack said as the crawling sensation increased. "December,
March, June...every three months someone buys it. And three months from June
is-"
"September," Carl
said. "You're thinkin of your daddy, right? But the others was done in right
here at Gateways by things like birds and spiders and snakes-all natural like.
Your daddy had a car accident and he wasn't here at Gateways like the
others."
But the regularity of the
fatal mishaps to Gateways residents, the steady three-month intervals between
them, bothered Jack. Especially since his father had almost bought it at the
end of another three-month cycle.
Something might be going on,
but it sure as hell wasn't the Everglades seeking revenge.
Jack feared something less
substantial but far more real might be behind it.
9
Tom awoke from his nap and looked around. Where was Jack?
Or had he only dreamed he was here? That might mean that the whole coma thing
was a dream too.
Then Jack walked in the
front door and he felt a strange mix of emotions: up that his prodigal son had
come home, even if only for a few days, and down because it meant the accident
and coma were all real.
"Oh," Jack said.
"You're awake. Short nap."
"The short ones are the
best. They don't leave you groggy."
Jack headed toward the
kitchen. "I'm going to have another beer. Want one?"
"No, thanks. But you go
ahead."
Tom watched him twist off
the top of an Ybor Gold and thought how much he looked like his mother. He had
Jane's brown hair and brown eyes. And he moved with her grace, her economy of
motion.
Tom hadn't seen his younger
son in over a year, not since that father-son tennis match he'd roped him into
last summer. He'd changed in that time. He didn't look older, but his eyes held
a different look. He couldn't call it a hunted look. Maybe haunted? Haunted by
Kate's death? Or was it something else? Guilt, maybe. Well, heshould feel
guilty about missing Kate's funeral. Damn guilty.
He didn't know what to make
of his younger son. He'd thought they'd been close. He'd made a special effort
to spend time with Jack while he was growing up. An unplanned baby. He and Jane
had their boy and their girl and were content with that. But Jack showed up
eight years after Kate, and neither Tom nor Jane had quite the energy they'd
had with the first two. But Tom hadn't wanted to shortchange the little guy,
thus the special effort.
But then Jane was killed;
and less than a year later Jack disappeared. He'd called home once to say he
was okay and not to worry, but wouldn't say any more. In the space of less than
a year Tom lost his wife and one of his sons. He'd never imagined he could hurt
so much. He thought his world had come apart.
He blamed himself at
first-what had he done, where had he gone wrong? But then he came to realize
that disappearing was in keeping with Jack's character as he'd come to know it.
He'd realized early on how
bright Jack was, brighter than either Tommy or Kate, but he was also something
of a loner. Okay, more than something of a loner. He did well enough gradewise,
but all his teachers said he'd do better if he applied himself. That and
"Does not play well with others" were constants during his early
schooling.
Although a natural athlete,
he never seemed to care for sports. At least not team sports. It was his
father's urging rather than any desire to compete that drove him to sign up for
a couple of the high school teams. He joined the track team, but as a
cross-country runner where he was competing with the terrain and himself as
much as the opposing school's team. He also spent two years on the swim team.
Both loner sports.
Even his first summer
job-cutting lawns in the neighborhood-was a solitary enterprise. He borrowed
the family lawnmower and went into business for himself. As a college student
he needed more cash so he went to work for one of the local landscapers.
But what he really seemed to
enjoy most was reading far-out fiction-if it had a monster or a spaceship on
the cover he bought it-and watching old sci-fi and monster movies.
He'd worried about Jack,
urging him into more social activities.It's a beautiful Saturday. Go down to
the park and get into one of the ball games! Jack would reluctantly get on his
bike and pedal off. Later, as Tom was riding through town, he'd spot Jack's
bike chained to a standpipe outside the local theater that was showing a
Saturday afternoon monster double feature.
He'd worried then, he
worried now. Jack earned his living, at least as far as Tom could tell, as an
appliance repairman. In the few times during the past fifteen years that he'd
seen his son-times he could number on the fingers of one hand-and had a chance
to ask him about it, he'd always seemed evasive. Maybe because he sensed his
father's disappointment. Nothing wrong in being a repairman in and of itself;
the world needed people who could fix the mechanical and electronic
conveniences of modern life. Fine. But he wanted more for his son. Jack had
three and a half years of college behind him that he wasn't using. What was he
going to do when his eyes got bad and his fingers got arthritic? Did he think
he was going to get by on that Ponzi scheme called Social Security? Tom hoped
not.
But what bothered him more
was that Jack seemed rootless, disconnected, adrift. Not exactly a
ne'er-do-well, but...
But what? Why was he so
secretive about his life? Tom was a believer in everyone's right to privacy,
but really...it was almost as if Jack were hiding something.
Earlier this year Tom had
gathered the courage to ask if he was gay. Jack had denied it, and his easy
laugh as he'd assured him that he was attracted only to women had convinced him
he was telling the truth. Tom wouldn't deny that that had been a relief. But if
Jack had said yes, well, Tom would have tried to find a way to accept it. He
was glad that wouldn't be necessary.
So if it wasn't that, what?
Was he using drugs? Or worse, dealing them? He prayed not. And for some reason,
thought not.
He supposed Jack's unused
education rankled him the most. Education wasn't something Tom took lightly.
He'd fought and killed to get his.
He slid back along the lines
of his life to his childhood. He'd been born during the Great Depression, the
son of a truck farmer outside Camden who'd been scraping by before the economy
crashed, and continued to scrape by after. At least they always had food on the
table, even if it was only vegetables they picked or pulled from the ground
themselves.
Tom's father had been just
old enough to see a little action in the First World War, and just a little bit
too old to fight in the Second, although that hadn't stopped him from trying to
enlist after hearing news of what the Japs did to Pearl Harbor. Tom remembered
being afraid that they'd soon see hordes of yellow men running wild through the
streets of America. He'd read numerous scenarios describing just that during
the late thirties in the pages of theOperator 5 magazines he borrowed from a
kid in school.
But his father was rejected
and the Japs never set foot one on North America. So much for that worry.
But when Tom hit eighteen
there was no money for college. He'd done well in high school but not well
enough for a scholarship. So he enlisted in the Army. It was peacetime so it
seemed a safe place to be: earn a little money, save what he could, and maybe
see some of the world in the bargain. But most importantly, it offered a chance
to get off that farm.
A year after he enlisted he
was seeing the world, all right. Shipped to Japan and then to South Korea to
fight in a UN "police action." Even now, he ground his teeth every
time he heard that phrase. It had been a full-blown war. He'd fought from sunny
Seoul to the frozen hills of North Korea where he witnessed firsthand the Red
Chinese human-wave assaults. For years after, he awoke sweating and shaking
with the memory. At least he was alive to have nightmares, unlike too many in
his unit who came back in boxes.
When he returned to the
States he found a day job and used the GI Bill to put himself through night
school. He graduated with an accounting degree and soon qualified as a CPA. He
joined Price Waterhouse and spent the rest of his working life with the firm.
He was able to provide his wife and children with all the things his own father
had been unable to give him. To Tom, the most important of those was a higher
education. Tom Jr. had made good use of it, so had dear Kate. The result was a
lawyer and a doctor in the family.
And then there was Jack...
The man in question dropped
into a chair opposite Tom.
"Can I ask you
something, Dad?"
"Sure."
"What were you doing
out on those back roads at that hour?"
Tom almost told him it was
none of his business but bit it back. He had to put this anger behind him,
forget what happened before and be glad for the now.
Could he do that? He had to
try.
"Just driving. I have
trouble sleeping lately. I lie there in bed and I close my eyes but it won't
come. They tell you not to stay in bed if you can't get to sleep, so I go out
for a drive."
"And do what?"
"Not much. Lots of
times I stop the car and sit on the hood and watch the sky. Jack, you wouldn't
believe it. You can cruise those back roads at night and not see another soul.
You stop the car and turn off the headlights and get out and above you are
stars like you've never seen, stars like I haven't seen since I was a kid in
the Jersey sticks, when the air was still clean enough to see the Milky Way
smeared across the top of the sky. It's breathtaking."
"You always drive the
same route?"
"Pretty much. There
aren't many roads to choose from out there."
"So you have a pretty
set pattern?"
"I guess so. Why are
you asking?"
Jack took a sip from his
bottle. "Just trying to put some pieces together. Since there's no one out
there, do you bother to stop at stop signs?"
"Well, yes. Of course I
do. It may not make sense but...I guess it's just habit. And it's not as if I'm
going anywhere, or in a hurry to get there."
"The cops think you
might have blown through a stop sign and got tagged by something speeding along
South Road. Something big."
Tom shook his head. "I
wish I could remember."
It disturbed him no end that
a piece of his life was missing-an important piece, one that had put him in a
coma for days. It scared him a little...no, it scared him a lot not knowing any
of the details. That was why he couldn't stay in the hospital. If he had to be
in the dark as to what had happened to him, he'd rather be in the dark here, in
familiar surroundings...where he felt he was in control. Or felt he had at
least some modicum of control, even if illusory.
"Do you remember a
woman attacked by pelicans last year?"
"Sure. Adele Borger.
Terrible thing. I heard she was walking with two other women whom the pelicans
ignored. They attacked just her. They say she was a terrible mess."
"And the guy bitten by
the snakes?"
"Ed Neusner. Where'd
you hear about him and Adele?"
"From Carl."
Tom had to smile.
"Telephone, telegraph, tell Carl. He's the Gateways gossipmonger. Not the
brightest bulb in the box, but a good man. Hard worker. He's got some wild
ideas, though. Has he told you his theory about the angry Everglades yet?"
Jack nodded. "Yeah.
Maybe it's not so far-out. What about the guy killed by spiders?"
"Joe Leo? What about
him?"
"Hasn't anyone noticed
a pattern to these deaths-like every three months?"
"No." Was he
right? Every three months? "No one's ever mentioned it. But why would
they? It can't be anything other than coincidence."
"Do you realize your
accident falls right into the pattern?"
Good Lord, Jack was right.
The muscles along the back of his neck tightened, but only for a second.
Coincidence. That was all it was, all it could be.
Tom forced a smile. "Is
this what you do in your spare time-invent conspiracies?"
Jack looked at him. "As
a matter of fact, yes."
"Don't tell me you
believe in UFOs. Please don't."
"The kind with aliens
inside? Hardly. But I've had to stop believing in coincidences."
Tom wondered at the
bleakness in his son's tone. "What does that mean?"
"Nothing." Jack
shook his head. "Maybe I'm reading too much into this. For a minute I had
this wild idea that the Gateways honchos might be offing some of their
healthier residents in order to have their houses revert to them."
"Thatis a wild
idea."
He sighed. "I know.
Especially when I realized that the houses would stay with the spouses. So
there goes the motive for that scenario."
"Except...," Tom
said as that tightening sensation crept again into the back of his neck,
stronger this time. "Except that Adele was a widow and Joe and Ed were
widowers."
"Oh, Jeez," Jack
said as they stared at each other.
10
In Semelee's vision, at least in the eye covered by the
shell, she moved at a height varyin from one foot to almost two foot above the
ground. Clumps of saw grass whipped past at eye level. Then she was splashin
through a shallow pond, and now back up into the grass again. The goin was
tougher than it shoulda been. In September of any other year, she-or rather,
Devil-woulda been able to stay in the wet for the whole trip. This year,
though, was different. Still, the drought wasn't gonna keep Devil from goin
where she wanted him to.
The goin was rougher for
another reason: She had to stay on course and find her landmarks with only one
eye.
At last she came to the pond
she'd been searchin for. The level was down, but not as much as most others.
She slid into the water and dove deep. Devil's underwater vision was good,
better than any human could claim, and soon enough she found the mouth of the
tunnel.
She entered a dark place, so
dark that even Devil's eyes was no good here. Sometime long ago, when all this
land was formed, something happened hereabouts that left a channel through the
limestone. Its width was enough to allow Devil to swim through, but just
barely. She had to go mostly by feel.
The channel branched and
Semelee guided Devil to the left. It seemed to go on forever, but eventually
she saw a glimmer of light ahead. Devil surged forward. She could feel his
hunger, but she held him back, slowin him to a stop a few feet below the
surface. She made him hover there for a few heartbeats, then started a slow
float toward the surface. She let only his eyes and the top of his snout break
the surface. An egret wading at the pond edge saw him and took flight. Smart
bird. As Devil took a breath through the nostrils atop his snout, Semelee
focused on the old man's house.
She'd been watchin the place
through a frog's eyes, waitin for the son to come home. After bein so close to
him in town this afternoon, she had to see him again. She'd felt somethin click
between them. Like magic. She sensed destiny there. No doubt about it.
But as she'd been watchin
she saw him arrive with that old crone from next doorand his daddy! Semelee was
so shocked she almost dropped her eye-shell. She thought this was bad at first,
but then changed her mind. She realized that somethin must be helpin her,
somethin big and powerful, maybe even the Glades itself must be guidin events.
Because now that the old man was out of the hospital, he was closer to her.
Comin home put him within strikin distance.
And strikin was just why
she'd guided Devil here. She had to get this finished. And it had to be this
old man. He'd been offered, and had to go before the time of the lights.
As a bonus, after the old
man was gone, there'd be nothin standin between her and the son. They could get
together, just like they was meant to.
She watched the front door.
She wondered when the old man would come out...or if he'd come out. Might be a
long wait.
She heard voices. Good thing
a gator's ears was atop his head, just behind the eyes, otherwise she woulda
missed it. A swish of Devil's tail angled him around so she could see who was
talkin and...
Semelee blinked-her own
eyes, not Devil's-and stared. There he was: the old man-wearing one of the
ugliest Hawaiian shirts she'd ever seen-and his son sittin in the neighbor
lady's front yard. This was too good to be true.
She made Devil sink toward
the bottom of the pond, and then had him back up to the far end. When she and
Devil made their strike, he had to be movin fast. He had to come out of the
water at full speed and charge right at the old man. The big gator was hungry
so she couldn't let him get distracted and go for anyone else-not that skinny
old lady and especially not the son. She had to keep him on course. Not such an
easy thing because when a gator opened his mouth, it blocked his straight-ahead
vision. To make up for that, nature made it so that if anything touches the
lower jaw, the upper snaps down like a bear trap. That meant she had to aim
just right so that nothin-not furniture and not the wrong people-got in Devil's
way.
Once he got his teeth set in
the old man, nothin was gonna break his hold. Semelee would have Devil drag him
into the pond and take him to the bottom. The tunnel was too narrow to fit both
gator and prey, so once the old man was drowned, she'd let Devil chow down a
little before high-tail in it back to the lagoon.
Back at the far end of the
pond now, she surfaced for another look. Yes...there he was, talkin and
drinkin...if she angled herself just right, she'd have a clear shot at the old
buzzard. She'd sink, use Devil's powerful tail to propel them through the
water, then hit the land a-runnin. The old man wouldn't know what hit him. And
finally she'd finish off what she, Luke, and Devil had begun the other night.
11
Tom watched the sunset. He and Anya did this a lot. Not
every afternoon, but often enough to approach the status of a tradition. He was
wearing one of his favorite shirts, the one with Mauna Loa in full eruption on
the back with bright orange lava flows trailing around to the front. As usual,
Anya was sipping her wine. He'd brought over a few beers. Often he'd supply a
stainless-steel shaker of gimlets that he put in the ice bucket, but the
Sapphire supply seemed lower than he remembered. Had Jack been nipping at it?
Jack had called his brother
to tell him their father was up and about, then handed him the phone. His older
son had made a stab at sounding overjoyed, but what he really sounded was
distracted. He said everything was fine but Tom sensed that something was
bothering him.
Did this mean he now had two
secretive sons?
Jack had come along for the
sunset tonight, and Tom learned that he and Anya had done the watch last night.
They really seemed to have
hit it off, those two. He felt a twinge of...what? Jealousy? No, that was
ridiculous. He liked Anya-loved her, in fact-but in a brotherly way. He felt no
sexual attraction to her. She was a friend, a confidante, a drinking buddy. He
could talk to her, confide in her. She'd lent him an ear when he'd talked about
his self doubts and his wayward children, she'd held him when he'd cried after
receiving word about Kate's death. What sexual urges he had-and they seemed to
be diminishing-were more than satisfied by a couple of the horny widows
populating Gateways South. They weren't looking for long-term
relationships-what an alien concept in this environment-and neither was he. The
couplings were Viagra fueled, but a lot of the pleasure was in the snuggling
and cuddling and having someone else in bed with you.
He turned on the
battery-powered CD-player-radio he always brought along. But instead of the
usual gentle music from the AM station he kept it tuned to, rap burst from the
speakers.
"What the hell?"
He checked the dial and, sure enough, it was tuned to the right band.
"What's going on here?"
"They changed the
format while you were in the hospital, hon," Anya said.
"No!"
"Afraid so.
Sorry."
He jabbed at the off switch.
"What's happening to the world? Used to be I'd drive behind women and
they'd be doing eye makeup and fixing their hair in the rearview mirror. Now
it's men who can't take their eyes off themselves-staring at themselves and primping.
Christ, everything's going to hell in a hand basket."
"Yeah," Jack said,
"and you can bet it's got a Fendi or Gucci logo on it."
"Very funny." He
pointed at his son's T-shirt. "Look at that. 'Hilfiger' all across the
front of your shirt. They sell you the shirt, then turn you into a free walking
advertisement for their product. You should be chargingthem to wear it."
"It's the way of the
world, Dad," Jack said. "Everybody does it."
"And that makes it
right? Since when do you of all people want to look like everybody else?"
"Long story, Dad."
"I'll bet."
What's the matter with me?
he thought. Why am I so cross? I sound like a crotchety old man.
He smiled to himself. Hell,
Iam a crotchety old man. But not without reason, not-
Anya's dog started yipping.
The little Chihuahua was standing at the edge of the pond barking at the water.
Crazy little dog. Tom had noticed a snowy egret there a few moments ago but it
was gone now. Probably scared off by the pooch. Nothing in sight but placid
water.
He noticed another sound. A
chorus of clanking rattles from all around him. The homemade ornaments-the
painted cans on sticks salted in among the leprechauns, bunnies, turtles, and
flamingoes-were shaking and rattling on their sticks. Funny...he didn't feel a
breeze.
The dog increased the pitch
and volume of his yipping.
Tom turned to Anya.
"What's wrong with him? He hardly ever barks."
"He must sense
something out of the ordinary," she said. "Oyv! Get away from there
and stop that racket. A migraine I'm getting already. Go back to-"
Suddenly the water erupted
and something huge and bellowing exploded from the pond. Tom dropped his beer
and his mind blanked in shock for an instant. What the hell was it? All he saw
at first was a wide-open set of jaws bordered with dagger like teeth, the
delicate pink membranes lining the maw, and the long, tapered, slightly darker
tongue waggling within. Then he saw the dark green scaly legs and the thick
undulating tail behind.
An alligator, bigger than
any he'd ever seen in all the gator parks he'd visited. And it was racing right
for him.
The only thing between Tom
and those jaws was Anya's Chihuahua. The little dog held its ground for a
second, then charged the gator, leaping at it with a high-pitched growl. The
onrushing jaws scooped up the dog and snapped closed.
"Oyv!" Anya cried.
"Holy shit!" Jack
was out of his chair and reaching for the small of his back.
Without breaking stride, the
alligator made one convulsive swallow and the dog was gone, devoured like a
canapé.
The monster gator was still
lunging forward. Tom started to leap up but his foot slipped on the grass and
suddenly he was falling backward in his chair. Before the gator opened its jaws
again, Tom got a look at its head. He caught a flash of two scaly protrusions,
gray-green like the rest of its hide, each about six inches long, on either
side just behind and below the large brown eyes with their vertical-slit
pupils. They looked like horns.
Something twisted in his
chest...something familiar about this alligator. But what? How could he ever forget
a creature like this?
As he and his chair hit the
ground, Tom rolled to the side and started to scramble to his feet. He heard
Jack mutter a curse and saw his hand coming out from under his shirt at the
small of his back. Jack moved quickly, like a pouncing cat, grabbing the back
of his chair and holding it out legs first, like a shield. To Tom's shock, he
leaped between him and the gator.
"Dad! Get back!"
Tom regained his feet and
backed away, but Jack hung in there, facing the big gator down.
"Jack! Anya!" Tom
cried. "Into the house!"
"Not to worry,"
Anya said.
Tom looked her way and saw
that she was still on her recliner. She'd straightened so that she was off the
back rest, but she still held her wineglass.
"Anya!" he said.
"Get up! It's-"
She glanced at him. Her eyes
and expression were unreadable, but her voice was calm, almost serene.
"No creature on earth
will harm you here."
"Tell that to
Oyv!" Jack said, backing away from the onrushing gator, but keeping
himself between it and Tom and Anya.
His son's courage and
protective stance amazed Tom. He'd known guys like that in the service-most of
them long gone, sadly-but had seen little of it in today's
every-man-for-himself world.
And then, incredibly, the
gator halted its charge. One second it was roaring toward them, the next it
stopped as if it had run into a wall. It stood on the border of Anya's emerald
sward and the brown grass that typified the rest of Gateways. It closed its
jaws and shook its head as if confused. It tried again to cross the line but
then quickly retreated.
It turned left and stalked
along the margin of green, thrashing its huge tail as it looked for a way in,
and that was when Tom saw something dangling from its right flank. He squinted
in the failing light and saw that it was an extra leg. But it looked vestigial.
It didn't move and didn't touch the ground. It simply hung there.
The gator then turned and
stalked the other way. Tom saw another vestigial limb on its left flank. But
far more puzzling was its inability to cross onto Anya's lawn. It made no
sense.
And then it occurred to him
that the situation might be only temporary. If only he had a gun!
"Call the cops!"
he cried. "Call security! Get someone here to either drive this thing off
or kill it before it kills someone!"
"No need," Anya
said from her recliner. "It will be leaving soon."
The alligator stopped its
stalking and bellowed. It shook its head and whipped its tail back and forth.
It seemed confused. It bellowed again, and this time it sounded as if it was in
pain. Then it rolled onto its side, and from there onto its back, swinging its
head back and forth, thrashing its tail and clawing at the air with its taloned
feet.
With another throaty bellow
it rolled back onto its feet but didn't charge. Instead it made a slow turn and
began a limping retreat toward the pond. As it moved away Tom noticed a
fist-sized bulge in its left flank, just ahead of the vestigial limb. Not so
much a bulge as a pulsation.
The gator roared again as
the bulge ruptured, spewing blood along the hide, a crimson splash along the
gray-green scales. Something moved within that opening, something red and
snouted. The hide split further and-
"Holy shit!" Jack
shouted. "It's Oyv!"
Dear God, he was right! The
little Chihuahua was chewing its way out of the gator. It squeezed through the
ragged opening like a baby being born. Once the upper half of his body was
clear, the rest of him slid out. He landed on all fours and shook himself, then
started barking at the retreating gator, chasing after it, nipping at its tail
until it slid into the water and disappeared below the surface.
The dog dove into the water,
repeatedly dipping its head under as it paddled in a small circle, then emerged
with the blood washed away. He shook off the water with an almost epileptic
shudder, then trotted back toward Anya with his tail wagging, his little head
held high, and his black eyes shining. Proud, and very pleased with himself.
"Good boy," Anya
said, patting her lap. "Come to Momma."
"What?" Jack
started to laugh and Tom thought he heard an hysterical edge to his voice.
"What the-? This is impossible! Just plain...." his voice trailed off
to a whisper "...impossible."
Jack turned and stared at
Anya and she stared right back. Tom would have asked what was going on between
them, but he couldn't speak. He had to sit down. He quickly righted his chair
and dropped into it, panting for air as his chest tightened.
He remembered now where he'd
seen that horned alligator before.
12
Semelee dropped the eye-shell and fell to the floor,
clutchin her left side. She felt as if someone had shoved a spear halfway
through her. Never in her life had she felt pain like this.
"It hurts, Luke. Oh,
God, it hurts!"
He hovered over her, hands
reachin toward her, then pull in back. "What happened? What's wrong?"
"Not sure." The
pain was easin off now. "Don't know how, but Devil got hurt. Hurt
bad."
"Did you finish the old
man?"
"No. I couldn't get to
him."
"That old guy?"
Luke's tone said he didn't believe a word of it. "He hurt Devil?"
"No-no. It was the same
like in the hospital, only ten times worse. There was this line I couldn't
cross without feelin like I was gonna be sick or explode or both. I couldn't
push Devil past it." Truth was, she couldn't push herself past it.
"And then this pain in Devil's side that I felt too. Like he was bein
stabbed, but from the inside."
"The old guy's
kid?"
"I don't think so. This
wasn't even at the old man's house. It was at the old lady's next door. It's
her. Gotta be her. She's the one that's been messin us up."
"Whatta we do?"
"I don't know. I'll
worry about that later. First thing I gotta do is get Devil home. He's hurt
bad, and he won't know where he is. I gotta bring him in."
She looked down at her
eye-shell. She knew that if she put it on she'd feel that pain again. But she
had to. She couldn't leave Devil hangin. Had to bring him back to his gator
hole where he could wallow and heal up.
How'd that skinny old hag do
it? How'd she hurt Devil whose hide was like armor plate?
Semelee didn't know but she
was gonna find out. And when she did, that old lady was gonna pay for what
she'd done to Devil. That bitch was gonna hurt like Devil. Maybe even worse.
13
"Dad? Are you okay?"
Tom looked up from his chair
and found Jack staring at him, a worried look on his face.
I must look like hell, he
thought. He tried to respond but all he could do was shake his head and sweat.
"Is it your
heart?"
"No." Finally he
could speak. "Not my heart. It's my head. I remember what happened Monday
night."
"You mean, Tuesday
morning?"
"Whenever I had the
accident. That...that alligator was there."
"That same one?"
Jack said.
"You think I could
forget those horns and those extra legs?"
Anya was watching him from
her recliner. "Don't go out at night like you do-how many times did I tell
you that?"
"Countless times."
He shook his head. "I should have listened."
Jack dropped into his own
chair, opposite. "But how does that alligator figure into your accident?
Or doesn't it?"
"Oh, it does. I
remember it now. I was driving south along Pemberton, taking my time..."
No hurry, no place to go, no
timetable to hew to on that warm yet unseasonably cool night. Cool enough to
drive with the windows open, not worrying about the mosquitoes because even
that easy pace was too fast for them. He remembered the hum of his tires on the
pavement, the soft feel of the wind swirling through the car and the mix of
fragrances riding it: the sour smell of the saw grass yearning for water, the
sweetness of the flowering roadside bushes.
"...and as I came to
the stop sign on South Road, I slowed to a stop-well, maybe not a complete
stop, but a sort of rolling stop. I was taking my foot off the brake as the car
eased into the intersection, but before I could give it gas again I saw something
crawl onto the road ahead of me. I hit the brakes hard and came to a dead stop
maybe three-quarters of the way through the intersection."
"An alligator?"
Jack said. "The one we just saw?"
Tom nodded. "No
question. I couldn't keep going. Something that size-I mean it must be twenty
feet long-doesn't leave you any room to go around it. And truth be known, I
didn't want to go around it. I felt safe in the car-especially after I put the
windows up. It wasn't threatening me, just staring at me. I put on the high
beams for a better look at it, and I must have been so fascinated by the sight
of this horned gator that I didn't hear the truck until it was practically on
top of me. My closed windows and its off headlights didn't help either."
"Wait," Jack said.
"The guy was driving out there in the dark with no lights? Not even
running lights?"
"Nothing. I heard a
rumble to my right and looked and saw this dark shape roaring down at me from
the west. It was practically on top of me. I didn't have time to react-or maybe
I froze in shock. Whatever the reason, I couldn't move out of its way and it
rammed me hard. I saw a big bumper smash into my right front fender and then
the car was jerked around like...like I don't know...like it had been punched
by God. My head hit something and everything went dark for a while, I don't
know how long, and then I was back again, but the world was blurry and full of
steam. My ruptured radiator, maybe."
"Did you see any part
of the truck? I mean, was it an old red pickup, by chance?"
Tom shook his head.
"No. This was a big rig, and seemed to be in good shape. At least its
bumper was. I remember seeing what looked like a wall of shiny chrome slamming
into me. Why did you think it was a pickup?"
"Just a thought."
Somehow Jack looked disappointed.
"Getting hit wasn't the
worst part. The really frightening part came after the impact. I was lying
there, feeling sick, hurt, bleeding, barely able to move, but alive and so
thankful I'd worn my seat belt, when I heard these voices, growing louder as
they got closer. I remember hearing someone sounding mad, cursing, saying
something about hitting me too hard and what if they'd killed me. And then the
door was pulled open and I almost fell out of the car. That was when I heard someone
say, 'Look! He's moving! You damn well better thank your lucky stars he's still
alive!'"
"That sounds like they
meant to hit your car."
"They did." Tom
repressed a shudder. He glanced at Anya who was watching him impassively, her
expression neutral. "It didn't click then, but now I'm sure they
did."
"Sure?" Jack said.
"What makes-?"
"By what came next.
They unbuckled my seat belt and pulled me out and laid me on the road. I
thought they were being awful rough with a man who might have a spine injury.
As I was lying there I saw the big truck pulled over down along the side of
South Road."
"Wait," Jack said.
"The truck pulled over? But the police said it was a hit and run."
"In a very real way, it
was. It's just that the run part was delayed a bit. Let me finish, will
you?"
"Okay," Jack said.
"Just trying to keep all this straight in my head."
"Forget about the truck
for now. I know I did as soon as I saw that big alligator start to waddle
toward me. I couldn't be sure, but I thought the men who'd pulled me from the
car were waving it forward. Like they wanted it to maul me...kill me...eat me."
This time he couldn't repress the shudder. "It was within ten feet of me
when I heard a siren. I couldn't see any flashing lights but I could hear the
two men start cursing about a cop car and what was he doing out here. That sort
of thing."
"Officer
Hernandez," Jack said.
"You know him?"
"Met him. Remember I
told you that a call about your accident came in twenty minutes before it
happened?" He glanced at Anya but she didn't react. "He's the one who
went out to investigate. Sounds like that call saved your life."
But that didn't make sense,
Tom thought. How could anyone have known about the accident before it happened?
Yetsomething with a siren had been coming down the road.
"I don't know who or
what was heading my way. All I know is that it scared off the two men who'd
pulled me from the car, because they started calling to the alligator as if it
was human, as if it could understand. I heard one yell, 'There's a cop on the
way! Get out of sight. We'll meet you back at the lagoon!' And then they
started running back toward the truck."
"Did you notice
anything about them?" Jack said. "Like did one have a funny-shaped
head?"
"Funny-shaped head?
Why-?"
"Anythingdistinguishing,"
Jack added quickly.
"No. Not that I could
tell. I didn't take my eyes off that alligator until it slithered off the road
and into the grass, and by then they were almost to the truck."
"Do you remember
anything at all about the truck? Like what kind? Was it a semi or a big van or
what?"
"A semi, maybe, but it
didn't have the usual big rectangular trailer. This had an odd shape, like
those trucks that carry gravel or something."
"What about a name or a
sign?"
"None that I could see.
I had only moonlight and starlight to go by and..." Something flashed in
his memory.
Jack leaned closer.
"What?"
"On its rear panel...I
think I saw something that looked like a flower, but all black. At least it looked
black in the moonlight. After that, I remember flashing lights and then I
didn't see anything until I woke up this morning."
A sudden realization hit him
like...like an onrushing truck. He looked at Jack and then at Anya.
"Someone tried to kill
me."
"Not necessarily,"
Jack said. "From what you heard them say...'thank your lucky stars he's
still alive...that sounds like theydidn't want to kill you."
He sensed that Jack didn't
believe a word of it, that he was just trying to make him feel better. But it
wasn't working.
"Theywanted to hit my
car. And I have a feeling they were going to feed me to that alligator."
"Maybe you were just in
the wrong place at the wrong time."
No...that didn't wash. No
question in Tom's mind: Someone wanted him dead.
The thought sickened him.
When he'd been in Korea, the NKs and the Chinese Reds had wanted him dead, but
that was war, that was to be expected. This was Florida. He'd been here just a
little over a year. He'd made a number of new friends but couldn't imagine how
he could have made an enemy.
Yet someone had tried to
kill him.
Suddenly Tom felt exposed
out here on Anya's lawn. He wanted walls around him. He rose unsteadily from
the chair.
"I think I'll head
home."
"You okay?" Jack
said.
"Yeah. Sure. I'll just
go inside and lie down. Excuse me, Anya."
"Go, Tom," she
said. She was still in her recliner, the wet dog curled up on her lap.
"You should rest."
"I'll come with
you," Jack said.
"That's okay. I can
find my own way."
"That's not the
point," his son said, rising and gripping his arm. "Come on. I'll
walk you back. I know how you feel."
No, you don't, Tom thought.
And I hope you never do.
A good kid, Jack. No, not a
kid. A man, and a pretty gutsy one at that, placing himself between a ferocious
gator and the old folks with only a lightweight resin chair as a weapon. But
Jack couldn't know what it was like to fear for his life, to have someone
wanting him dead. That took a war. It had been Tom's great hope for his sons
that neither would have to go to war as he did and know that kind of fear. And
it had worked out. Both boys had been too young for Vietnam, and a volunteer army
had been in place by the time the Gulf Wars rolled around.
"Wait," he said,
turning. "We should call the cops or the wildlife control or something,
shouldn't we?"
"Why?" Anya said.
"To let them know
there's a monster gator in our pond."
"Not to worry,"
Anya said with a wave of her hand. "He's gone. And after such a reception
as he got here today, I doubt he'll be back."
"Where'd he go?"
Jack said.
"There's an underground
tunnel that leads from the pond back into the Everglades."
"Really?" Tom
said. "I didn't know that."
Jack stared at her.
"How do you know, Anya?"
She shrugged. "I've
been around here a long time. I shouldn't know things?"
He saw Jack stare at her
again for a moment, then point a finger her way. "We need to talk."
She raised her wineglass.
"I'll be here."
Tom wondered at that
exchange. As soon as they were in the house he turned to Jack. "Why did
you say that to Anya?"
"What?"
"'We need to talk.'
About what? What does that mean?"
"I've got some
questions for her."
"About what?"
"Things. Tell you about
it later."
Why didn't Tom believe that?
What was going on between those two? He was about to press him when Jack
grabbed the pen and notepad from the counter by the phone.
"Just thought of
something. Give me the names again of those three people who were killed."
"Why?" And then he
knew. "Oh, no. You don't think-"
"I don't know what to
think, Dad. When Carl told me about the others he said you didn't fit the
pattern because the others were killed by birds and spiders and snakes. You
were different because you were hurt in a car accident. But if what you
remember is correct, you weren't going to be the victim of a hit-and-run
accident, you were going to be a meal for that alligator. And thatdoes fit the
pattern."
Tom shook his head. "A
few hours ago you were implicating Gateways in a scheme to get properties
reverted. Now you think it's...what? How, just how, do you get birds and snakes
to attack someone?"
Jack stared at him.
"How do you get an alligator to attack someone? Twice. Because, Dad, that
gator was coming for you. He was aimed at you like an arrow shot from a
bow."
Tom wanted to deny it-tried
to deny it-but couldn't. Jack was right. Those open jaws had been coming
straight at him.
"But it's crazy,"
he said. Even crazier was how the gator had stopped at the edge of Anya's lawn.
He was suddenly too tired to think about that now. Another question was far
more pressing. "Why me?"
"That's what I intend
to find out," Jack said.
Tom noticed a fierce look in
his eyes. There was fire in Jack, a heat and a resolve he'd never expected in
his appliance-repairman son.
And something else. He had a
sense that Jack already knew the answer, or at least where to look. But how was
that possible? He'd been here barely two days.
"Give me those three
names," Jack said with the pencil poised over the pad.
14
His father had said good night and retreated to his
bedroom. Jack heard the shower run, then the mutter of the TV through the
closed door. Maybe Dad was watching it, maybe just zoned out in front of it.
Jack was grateful for the
solitude. It gave him time to think. He grabbed a beer from the fridge and
paced the front room, mulling what had happened, and what had almost happened.
He'd been unarmed. Well, why not? Just visiting a neighbor lady for some
conversation and a few sundown drinks. Who needs to be armed?
He'd know better next time.
If there was going to be a next time. A few rounds into that gator's eyes or
its open mouth...that would have stopped it. Or at least he was pretty sure it
would have.
But a gun would have been
superfluous because the gator hadn't been able to cross the line into Anya's
yard.
Jack was getting used to the
surreal, but still...
Could someone
or-worse-something be controlling the wildlife around here? This whole
situation hadOtherness written all over it. He was convinced the Otherness had
taken Kate from him, then it had made an attempt at Gia and Vicky and the
unborn baby. Was it after his father now?
Gia and Vicky...
He pulled out his Tracfone
and punched in Gia's number. She was delighted to hear that his father was out
of his coma. Jack left out the other details, like attempted murder by
alligator-twice-and told her he'd be hanging around a few days more, just to
make sure he was okay.
Then Vickie got on the
phone. She wanted him to bring her back a pet alligator. Jack shuddered at the
thought but told her he'd see if he could catch one for her. A little one.
Right.
Then Gia again. She was
feeling good; she thought she'd felt the baby move but wasn't sure. All quiet
on Sutton Square.
After I-love-yous and
goodnights, he hung up and made another call to Manhattan. This time to Abe.
When Abe picked up, Jack
said, "Hey. It's me."
Jack's Tracfone was
untraceable, but he could never rule out that the BATF had taken an interest in
Abe-linked him to an illegal weapon, perhaps-and were eavesdropping. So for his
own sake and for Abe's, he never mentioned his name or anyone else's, even Abe's.
"Good evening, Me.
How's the vacation going?"
"Could be better. You
know how I thought I'd have an easy time at the tournament? It's not turning
out that way. The competition is a lot stiffer than I dreamed possible."
"Is that so? As I
recall, you weren't expecting any competition."
"Turned out I was
wrong. Imagine that. But here's the thing. I need bigger and better equipment.
Some new tennis clothes, for sure. Large size."
"How large? X?
Double-X? Triple-X?"
"Big as you've got.
Thinkelephant when you pick it out."
"Elephant?"
"Mastodon. Oh, and
maybe some new racquets."
"Any particular
model?"
"You pick them out. I
need something with a nice sweet spot and lots more power than what I've
got."
"So it's a power player
you're up against?"
"Yeah. Back court all
the way until today's round. That was when he started coming to the net. I
don't think I've seen his best stuff yet, so I want to be prepared."
"I should say so. I'll
send you a nice selection of racquets that you should be able to adjust to your
needs. You want I should include extra strings in case you break some?"
"Definitely. The more
the better. You know how I break strings."
"Do I. Anything
else?"
"Some tennis
balls."
"Balls? I'm not
following you here. Surely they have tennis balls where you are?"
"Not like the brand you
carry. Yours always seem fresher. And make sure they're yellow. A pale
yellow."
"Pale yellow..."
Jack detected a note of
uncertainty in Abe's voice. "Yeah, pale yellow. Like the color of my
favorite fruit."
"A lemon?"
"No! Pineapple, my man.
Pineapple. You know how I love pineapple."
"Oy, of course. How
could I have forgotten? Yes, well, I'll check to see if I have any of that
shade in stock. I should send you how many?"
"Let's see...I don't
want to run short. How about a dozen?"
"A dozen. Sounds to me
like you'll be playing a lot of tennis."
"I hope not. The longer
you play, the greater the chance of injury. As you know, I like to rip right
through the matches without much wear and tear, but you never know. Best to be
prepared, don't you think?"
"Definitely. You want I
should send them to that address you left with me?"
"That's the place. And
make it quick, okay? Who knows what I'll be facing tomorrow."
"I'll pack it up right
away and get it out tonight. I'll use my special carrier. If all goes well you
should have them by tomorrow afternoon."
"Swell. Put it on my
tab and we'll settle up when I get back. I owe you one."
"I'll add this to the
'owe' list."
"Do that. Oh, and by
the way. Have I got a girl for you. She's an older woman, but she could be a
soul mate."
"Now you're a matchmaker?"
"Just trying to enrich
your life, my friend."
"Okay. I'll humor you.
First question: Is she on the thin side or the heavy side?"
"She makes Olive Oyl
look like a sumo wrestler."
"Sorry. Not interested.
I need a woman with some meat on her, enough bulk so that we don't look like
Mr. and Mrs. Sprat when we go out together. Someone who won't frown when I put
extra cream cheese on my bagel. Someone, in fact, who'll ask me if I want
seconds, or even thirds. An anorexic woman is the last thing I need."
"Okay. Just thought I'd
ask."
"Find a Sophie Tucker
for me and then we'll talk. But back to the tennis matches: Listen, be careful.
Watch your footwork. Sounds like even a minor misstep could take you out of the
game."
"Ain't that the truth.
Talk to you later."
"Stay in touch. Let me
know the scores."
"Will do."
Jack smiled as he cut the
connection, but it faded as he turned toward his father's bedroom. He knocked
softly on the door. When he received no answer, he pushed it open and peeked
in. His father lay in bed, snoring softly, the remote in his hand, the Weather
Channel playing on the TV.
Jack turned and headed for
the front door. Time to visit Ms. Mundy. He had a few questions he wanted
answered. Hell, he had lots of questions, and he knew she had answers to some
of them.
15
Anya's front yard was deserted. The furniture was as he'd
left it but she and Oyv were gone. So were the glasses, the wine, and the beer
Jack and his father had brought over.
Jack knocked on the door.
Anya, wearing another garish kimono with bright red sampans sailing across her
flat chest, answered almost immediately.
"You're back. That must
mean your father's okay."
"Shaken up but he's all
right, I think. We need to talk."
"As you wish," she
said, moving away from the door. "Come in."
Jack stepped into the
greenhouse interior.
"I put your beer in the
refrigerator so it wouldn't get warm," she said on her way to the kitchen.
"Do you want one?"
"Thanks, no. I'm not
here to drink."
She stopped at the kitchen
counter where the wine bottle waited. An empty glass stood next to one half
filled. Not dainty little claret glasses but big glass balloons that held eight
to ten ounces if they held a drop. She topped off both and held out the fresh
one to Jack.
"Here. Try this. It's
Italian. Valpolicella."
"No, really. I-"
She locked eyes with him.
"I don't like to talk to people who won't share a glass with me."
Jack shrugged and took the
glass. He'd done worse things to get someone to talk. He took a sip.
"It's good."
There. Was she happy? "Now, can I ask you a few questions?"
"If you wish." She
seated herself on the sofa overhung with plants and vines. She lit a cigarette
and began shuffling a deck of cards. She pointed him toward the recliner.
"Sit. You want to ask me about a Russian woman with a malamute, don't
you."
Jack felt his jaw drop.
"I-I-"
"And an Indian woman
with a German shepherd. The one who told you to stay away from that house in
Astoria. The one you foolishly ignored."
"How did you
know?" Jack said, finding his voice.
She blew smoke and shrugged
as she began laying out the cards in a classic solitaire tableau. "Lucky
guess."
"Since June I've been
running into women who know too much-women with dogs. You're the third. Two
isn't a trend. But three..."
"Not to worry. You have
nothing to fear from them. Or me."
Jack took a deep breath and
let it out. He'd expected denials or, at the very least, evasions. To have her
come right out and confirm his suspicions...it knocked him off balance.
He took a gulp of his wine.
Maybe this was why she'd insisted he take a glass.
"Who are you
people?"
She finished laying out the
cards and began to play, flipping them over with sharp little snaps. "No
one in particular."
"I don't buy that. You
know too much. Back in June, when I was sick, the Russian lady came to my
room"-he saw her in his mind, salt-and-pepper hair, gray jogging suit, big
white malamute-"and told me things about a war I'd been drafted into. 'Is
war and you are warrior,' she said. I don't know if she mentioned it directly
or not, but I'm pretty sure she was going on about something called the
Otherness and-"
Anya stopped her card play
and looked up at him. "You'd already heard of the Otherness by then."
"Yeah."
Although he wished he
hadn't. The first mention had been earlier in the year, in the spring at
a-surprise-conspiracy convention. Since then his life hadn't seemed quite his
own.
According to what he'd been
told, two vast, unimaginably complex cosmic forces have been at war forever.
The prize in the war is all existence-all the dimensions, all the realities,
all the parallel dimensions up for grabs. Earth and humanity's corner of
reality is a minor piece on the game board, of no special importance. But if
one is going to declare itself winner, one has to take all the pieces. Even the
inconsequential ones.
One side-a force, a state of
being, whatever-is inimical to humankind. It has no name but through the ages
came to be called the Otherness by people aware of its existence. If the
Otherness takes over, it will transform Earth's reality into a place toxic to
all known life. Fortunately, Earth and its attendant reality are currently in
the portfolio of the other side, the force known only as the Ally. From what
Jack had learned, "Ally" was a misnomer. This force was not a friend,
merely an enemy of humanity's enemy. The most Earth could expect from it was
benign neglect.
"At the time I thought
the Russian lady was some sort of fever dream, but then she showed up again and
told me..."
"That there would be no
more coincidences in your life."
Jack nodded. The words still
chilled him. The implications were devastating.
"Was she right?"
Anya went back to her game,
flipping and arranging the cards in the tableau, moving some aces and deuces up
to the foundation.
"I'm afraid so,
hon."
"Then it means that my
life is being manipulated. Why?"
"Because you are
involved."
"Not by choice."
"Choice means nothing
in these matters."
"Well, if someone or
something thinks I'm its standard bearer, it had better think again."
"You are not the
standard bearer. Not yet."
If true, that was a relief.
A small one.
"Then who is?"
Anya was dealing to herself
from the stock now, and Jack couldn't help but notice that the cards were
falling her way, more and more finding places in the tableau or the foundation.
"One who preceded you,"
she said. "He preceded the twins as well. You remember the twins, don't
you."
Jack had a flash of two men
in identical black suits and dark glasses, with identical pale, expressionless
faces.
"How could I
forget?"
"They were meant to
replace their predecessor. But when you dispatched them-"
"They didn't leave me
much choice. It was them or me. And I tried to help them at the end, but they
refused."
"They did what they had
to do, but their passing left a void. One that you were tapped to fill."
"But you said there's
someone else."
Anya nodded as she laid the
final card from her stock on the solitaire tableau. All the cards were face up.
She'd won. Without bothering to shift all the tableau cards to the foundation,
she gathered them up and began shuffling.
"There is. Amensch
ofmensches , that one. But he's old now, and may die before he's needed
again."
"'Again'?"
"He was the Ally's
champion for a long time."
"How long?"
"Verylong. So long you
wouldn't believe. But now his days are numbered. After ages in the Ally's
service-too long, I think, but who listens to an old woman-he was freed. But it
seems his liberation was premature. Even though he has aged, he may be needed
again. But if he doesn't live till that day..." Her eyes met Jack's.
"Then it'll be
me?"
"You."
Against all reason, Jack
believed her. With an effort, he shelved his dismay. Maybe that day would never
come. Or maybehe'd have died of old age when it did.
But he hadn't come here
about himself. He'd come about his father.
"Is the Otherness
involved in what's been happening to my father?"
She nodded as she finished
shuffling and began to lay out another solitaire tableau.
"The Ally is involved
here as well, though tenuously."
"But I can assume, at
least from what I've seen, that you and your ladies are on the Ally's side,
right?"
She shook her head.
"No. I oppose the Otherness, but I've no connection to the Ally."
"Then whose sideare you
on?"
"Yours."
"But I'm stuck with the
Ally, so that means-"
Anya grimaced with
irritation and stopped her card play.
"I didn't say the
Ally's side, did I? No. I said,yours . That meansyou , separate and distinct
from the Ally."
"But why?"
"Because the Ally can
be as ruthless as the Otherness. It opposes the Otherness for its own reasons,
none of which involves our health and happiness. It will use you and anyone
else it can to fend off the Otherness, and not care a whit what happens to you.
Humanity's well-being is not on its agenda. It is, however, on mine."
"Why? What's your stake
in this?"
She began rearranging the
cards in the tableau.
"My stake is your
stake. Everyone here on this planet is in the same boat-Earthis a boat, when
you think of it-and we all deserve to be free of both these meddling powers.
This planet, in this subdivision of reality, is inhabited by sentient beings,
which makes it all the more valuable in the struggle. But it's more than mere
property that can be won or lost or traded at will. If it must belong to one of
them, then I'd far prefer the Ally over the Otherness. But why belong to
either? Why not be shut of both of them?"
"Sounds good to
me," Jack said. He leaned back, trying to get a handle on what she was
saying, and what it meant. "But what I'm getting here...what you're
telling me...is that there's a third force involved in all this."
"I suppose you could
put it that way."
"And you...you and
those other women...you're part of that?"
"So it would
appear."
"But how can you hope
to compete with the other two players?"
"Because I must."
"But who are you?What
are you? Where do you come from?"
"We come from
everywhere. We're all around you. You simply never see us."
Jack shook his head to clear
it. He didn't want to deal with this now. He'd had trouble enough buying into
the cosmic tug-of-war scenario. But now Anya was telling him that a third party
had entered the fray-or maybe had always been in the fray but no one had told
him. Whatever the case, he'd get to that later. Right now he had to stay
focused on his father.
"Why my father? Why
would-?"
And then he had a chilling
thought. What had she said to him that first day in the hospital room?
Trust me, hon, there's more
to your father than you ever dreamed.
"Oh, no! You're not
telling me that this 'predecessor champion' you've been telling me about is my
father!"
"Tom?" Anya
laughed. "Oy! Such a thought! You think you're living in a fairy tale? How
can you even consider such a thing!"
"That's not a exactly a
'no.'"
"All right then. You
want a 'no'? Here's a 'no.' Your father hasno direct connection to the Ally or
the Otherness. Never did, never will."
She laughed again and
continued her card play.
Jack too had to smile. All
right, yeah, it was a ridiculous thought. The pen might be mightier than the
sword, but an accountant as defender of humanity against the Otherness? Crazy.
Yet...for a moment there...
"Wait. You said no
direct connection. Does he have anindirect connection?"
"Of course. Isn't it
obvious?"
"Because he's my
father?"
Anya nodded. "A blood
relative."
Jack closed his eyes. This
was what he'd suspected, what he'd feared.
"That alligator,
then...it was sent by the Otherness."
"Sent? No, that was
someone else's idea. I can tell you that the creature was created by the
Otherness, but whether intentionally or accidentally is hard to say."
"Why? You seem to know
everything else. Why don't you know that?"
"I don't know everything,
kiddo. If I did, maybe the two of us could send the Otherness and the Ally
packing."
"Why do I get this
feeling you're holding back? You don't know everything? Fine. Nobody does. But
why don't you just come out and tell everything youdo know?"
"Because sometimes it's
best that you learn things on your own. But I can tell you about the connection
between the Otherness and that alligator."
Jack leaned back and took
another slug of wine. "I'm all ears."
"It was born near a
nexus point."
"And that is...?"
"A place. A very
special place. In various locales around the globe there are spots where the
veil between our world and the Otherness is thin. Occasionally the veil
attenuates to the point where a little of the Otherness can enter our sphere.
But only briefly. Rarely do beings from the other side pass through. But
influence...ah, that's another matter."
"Let me guess a
location," Jack said. "Washington, DC, maybe? Say, near the Capitol
Hill or the White House?"
Anya smiled as she gathered
up her cards. She'd won again.
"I'm afraid thosegonifs
have no such excuses for their behavior, hon. But one is near here, and another
near where you live."
"Where?" Somehow Jack
wasn't surprised.
"In the New Jersey Pine
Barrens. At a place called Razorback Hill."
Jack had gone into the
Barrens last spring, and almost hadn't come out. "It must be pretty well
hidden. I mean, don't you think someone would have stumbled across it by
now?"
"There are places in
the Pine Barrens that no human eyes have seen. But even so, the nexus points
manifest themselves directly only twice a year-at the equinoxes. But their
indirect effects can be viewed every day."
"Like what?"
"Mutations. Something
leaks through from the other side around the time of the equinox; whatever it
is changes the cells of the living things around it-plants, animals,
trees...and people."
"You'd think someone
would have noticedthat by now."
Anya shook her head.
"The nexus points are located in unpopulated areas."
"How convenient."
"Not so. When you
consider that these leaks have been occurring for ages, and that most people
experience a sense of uneasiness when they near a nexus point, it makes sense.
Nexus points don't occur in places that people avoid. Just the opposite: People-most
people, that is-instinctively avoid nexus points."
Jack was thinking,nexus
point...mutations...a humongous horned alligator...
"There's a nexus point
out there in the swamp, isn't there."
"I told you, it's not a
swamp, it's-"
"A river of grass.
Right. Okay. But am I right that there's a nexus point nearby in the
Everglades?"
Anya nodded. "In a
lagoon within one of the hardwood hummocks."
"How do you know all
this?"
Anya shrugged. "Like I
said before, hon, I've been around here longer than you."
"How long?"
"Long enough."
"All right, then."
He sensed a certain timelessness about Anya, and was convinced she was more
than she pretended to be. He took a chance and asked her flat out: "How
long have you and these other women been around?"
"I should tell you my
age?"
She lit another cigarette
and gathered up her cards. She'd won another game. That made three in a row.
More than luck there. Had to be. She was either cheating or...
Let it go.
"All right, don't tell
me. Maybe if I see that Indian woman again"-he remembered her orange sari
and long braid, and her German shepherd-"maybe I'll ask her. She looked
young."
Anya laughed."Never ask
a woman her age!"
Thinking of the other women
with dogs reminded Jack of something one of them had said.
"The Russian woman
mentioned someone called the Adversary. Who's that? She said I'd met him."
Anya leaned back and stared
at him.
"You have. Remember my
telling you about the aging one who once spearheaded the Ally's cause? Well,
the Otherness has its own champion. He's very dangerous. He's ancient. He's
been killed more than once but each time he's been reborn."
"And I've met him?
I-"
And then Jack knew. The
strange, strange man who'd first explained the Otherness to him, the man he
suspected of being ultimately responsible for Kate's death...
"Roma," he
whispered. "Sal Roma. At least that was what he told me his name was. I
later learned that was a lie."
"Always you must expect
lies where he is concerned-unless the truth will hurt you. He feeds on
pain."
"Yeah. That was what
your Russian friend told me: human misery, discord, and chaos. But who is he,
really?"
"More likewhat is he.
He used to be a man just like you, but now he is more. He is destined to become
something else, but he hasn't reached that state yet. He can do things that
humans can only dream of, but he is still in the process of becoming. He's
known as 'the Adversary' to those who oppose the Otherness, and 'the One' to
those aligned with it."
"Why would people work
for the Otherness when they know it means the end of everything?"
Anya shrugged. "Who can
explain people? Some are so filled with hate that they want to see everything
destroyed, some believe their efforts toward bringing the Otherness apocalypse
will be rewarded afterward, some believe packages of lies they've been fed, and
some are simply mad. The Adversary orchestrates their movements from
afar."
"But what's hisname
?"
"He uses many. He has
many identities, many different looks, but he never uses his True Name."
"Do you know it?"
Anya nodded. "But I
will not tell you."
"Why the hell
not?"
"Because he would hear
you. And you do not want to attract his attention."
"Says who?" Jack
said, feeling the heat of the rage he'd been carrying around for months now.
"I've got a score to settle with him and-"
"No!" Anya was
leaning forward in her seat, eyes ablaze. "You stay away from him!
Whatever you do, you must not antagonize him. He will snuff you out like a
match if it suits him."
"We'll see about that.
Just tell me his name and let me worry about the rest."
Anya shook her head.
"Speaking his name would lead him here-and he's looking for me."
"You? Why?"
"To kill me."
Her words shocked Jack. And
the matter-of-fact way she said it, as if she'd been dealing with this threat
for so long she'd grown used to it, made it all the more believable.
But could it be true? If so,
he'd lay off pressing her for Roma's real name.
"Because you oppose the
Otherness?"
"More than that. I
stand in its way-inhis way."
Jack wanted to say, You're a
little old lady...how can you stand in anyone's way? But he hadn't forgotten
how that alligator had been unable to enter her yard. Perhaps she and the
others were keeping out the Otherness just as she'd kept out the gator, but on
a far greater scale.
This little old lady was a
lot more than she seemed. She had power...but from where?
Jack wasn't going to waste
his time asking. She'd already made it damn clear there were things about her
and her friends she didn't want known.
"You stand in his way
to...what?"
"To opening the gates
to the Otherness. The Adversary will remain in a state of becoming until he
succeeds. If he does, he will be transformed and life, reality, existence as we
know it will end. He thought he'd found a shortcut earlier this year. You were
there and-"
"How do youknow this
stuff? Or was one of your ladies watching?"
"You might say
that."
Jack remembered gazing down
into a bottomless hole...into an abyss glowing with strange lights...a steadily
enlarging hole that he feared might devour him and the rest of the world.
Anya said, "The
Adversary failed then because he acted prematurely. That shows me he's anxious
to finish his becoming. Since then he and those he has manipulated have doubled
and redoubled their efforts to open those gates. But to achieve final success
he must kill me or hurt me so severely that I can no longer oppose them."
Apprehension tightened his
shoulders. If the Adversary or the One or Roma or whatever the hell he was
called was as dangerous as Anya said, she could be in big trouble. Jack hadn't
known her long, but he'd taken a real liking to this old broad.
"But if he doesn't know
where you are, he can't hurt you, right?"
She shook her head.
"No. He can hurt me. He hurts me all the time."
"But how-?"
Anya stiffened and grimaced
with pain as she sucked air through her teeth with a hiss. She arched her back
and reached around to touch her right shoulder blade. Oyv jumped up and started
barking.
"See?" she gasped.
"Even now he does it! He's hurting me again!"
Jack was up and around the
chair, looking at her back.
"What? What's
happening?"
"Oh!" She was
taking quick, shallow, panting breaths. "He stabs me! It hurts!"
"What can I do?"
"Nothing. It will
pass."
Jack thought he saw a small
spot of red-blood red-appear on the back of her kimono, but couldn't be sure
because it was within the hull of one of the bright red sampans.
"Are you
bleeding?"
She leaned back against the
chair, hiding her back from view.
"I'll be all
right."
Her color was better and her
breathing, though not normal yet, was easing in the right direction.
"Should I get a
doctor?"
She shook her head. "No
doctor can help with this. I'll be fine. This isn't the first time he's hurt
me, and it won't be the last. He's moving closer and closer to his goal. A
strange season is upon us, and it will grow stranger."
"Damn it, Anya, tell me
his name. I'll put an end to this."
She shook her head.
"No, Jack. He's immune to your methods. He's more than you can
handle."
"Then how do we stop
him?"
Anya looked up at him and
Jack saw fear in her eyes. "I don't know. We can only hope that he makes a
fatal mistake-he's not perfect you know-or that the Ally steps in on our side.
Otherwise, I don't know if hecan be stopped."
16
After Anya's pain had subsided, she shooed Jack out of the
house. He felt he should stay but he could see that she wanted to be alone.
He stood in her front yard
among the ornaments, staring at the rising moon, and wondering at how his life
had changed since a year ago last summer when he'd accepted the seemingly
simple, straightforward job of finding a stolen necklace. Now it seemed that
every time he turned around, a new revelation leaped at him, tearing a jagged
rent in the fabric of the snug, familiar worldview he'd been wrapped in for the
first thirty-five years of his life.
A year ago he'd have written
Anya off as a loon. But no more.
He popped into his father's
house and peeked again into his bedroom. The old guy was still sleeping
peacefully with the TV going. Jack found the screwdriver and flashlight he'd
used last night, then stepped outside and headed for the clinic.
Although he'd broken in once
before, he didn't take for granted that it would be as easy the second time. He
was just as careful about approaching the building, keeping to the bushes and
watching for the security patrols. About halfway there he realized he'd
forgotten the mosquito repellent. They'd declared his arms and neck an
all-night deli and were ordering take out.
Slapping and scratching, he
picked up his pace and made it to the clinic faster than last night. He popped
the window latch again and slid inside. After reclosing the window, he killed a
couple of mosquitoes that were still drilling into his skin, then got to work.
Straight to the record room
where he began flipping through the charts. He had the list of names his father
had given him and though it was a long shot that they'd all had recent
physicals, he had to check.
He started at the top of the
alphabet and worked his way down, pulling the charts as he came across
them:Adele Borger...Joseph Leo...Edward Neusner....
All here.
No second guessing the
ethics of invading privacy this time. These folks weren't his father, and they
were dead.
Inside the charts, Jack knew
where to look. He went to the bottom of the final page of the complete
physical. Each one read the same:Final assess: excellent health.
A prickling sensation ran
along the back of his neck. Seemed like being single at Gateways South and
passing your free physical with flying colors was not a good thing. In their
cases, it appeared to be a death sentence.
The pattern was obvious: The
healthiest single members of Gateways South were dying by mishap. An early
demise meant that, instead of having to wait many years for these healthy folk
to go, the management was able to resell their homes immediately.
Jack had a pretty good idea
as to thewhy and thewho , and a wild idea as to thehow .
He wondered if the doc was
in on it. Probably not. He seemed like too much of a straight shooter.
Besides, you didn't need the
doc to get a look at the files. Jack's presence here proved that. But there was
an even easier way. If you were someone with an official position at Gateways
South, and if you had a key to the clinic, you could stroll in here at night,
check out the names of those who'd had a complete physical lately, and peruse
their files to your heart's content.
Jack decided that he and
Gateways South director Ramsey Weldon were going to have a little
heart-to-heart chat tomorrow.
Friday
1
Jack jogged along the asphalt walking/bicycle path that
wound through the pines lining the eastern limits of Gateways South. A thin
morning mist wound between the trunks; brown needles, shedding early due to the
drought, littered the path. The scent of pine lay thick in the air.
He'd awakened to silence for
a change. Carl must have been trimming someone else's hedges this morning. His
father was just starting to stir, so Jack had come out for a run. He'd been too
sedentary the past few days. Needed to get the blood flowing. He'd thought about
checking on Anya but it was too early. He'd swing by on the way back.
He chugged along in a
Boneless T-shirt and gym shorts, building a sweat; he wore his leather belt
under the loose shirt to hold the small-of the-back holster for his Glock 19; the
way it bounced against the base of his spine as he ran was annoying, but no way
he was going unarmed around this place.
An eight-foot chain-link
fence ran along the Gateways border to his right. The links of the par-3 golf
course lay to his left. He noticed a lone, vaguely familiar figure hunched over
a putter on a rise ahead. As he neared he recognized him: Carl.
Jack veered to his left and
found Carl on a putting green, working with a club that protruded from his
right sleeve. Jack had thought he was a righty, but he was using a lefty
stance.
He waited until Carl had hit
the ball-he just missed, rimming the cup-before speaking.
"When did you join the
community?"
Carl jumped and spun.
"Oh, it's you! You scared me again! You gotta learn to make more noise
when you come up on people."
"Sorry," Jack
said. "I'll work on it. Say, did your video camera catch any signs of Ms.
Mundy watering her lawn?"
"Zilch again." He
grinned. "And I hope it don't. Wouldn't mind keepin this up the rest of
the year, long as old Doc Dengrove keeps payin me."
Jack glanced down at the
balls Carl had arranged on the grass before him, sitting in a line, waiting for
the putter. "Is a golfing membership one of the perks of your job?"
He shook his head.
"Only on weekdays, and only on my day off, and only if I stay out of
everbody's way. I ain't much with the drivers-I mean, my scores for eighteen
holes are pretty pan-o-ramic-but I like to putt. I ain't a bad miniature golf
player."
"No kidding." This
was fascinating, simply fascinating. Jack waved and turned away. "Got to
keep moving. Good luck. Sink those putts. Make those birdies."
But he never got restarted.
The sight of a beat-up red pickup cruising the dirt road on the far side of the
fence stopped him cold. It slowed as a pair of mismatched eyes peered at him
from under the brim of a dirty John Deere cap, then picked up speed again.
A thought struck Jack. He
turned back to Carl, intending to ask him if he knew them, but the half-sick
look on his face as he watched the pickup bounce away into the trees said it
all.
"You know those guys,
don't you."
Carl swallowed. His left eye
was already looking away; the right followed. "Why you say something like
that?"
"Because I think you
do. Who are they?"
"Nobody to mess with.
You don't want to know em."
"Yeah, I do."
Especially after what his father had told him last night about the accident.
Jack gave him a hard stare. "Who are they, Carl?"
Carl looked like he was
going to try to float some bullshit, then his shoulders sagged and he shook his
head.
"They live out in the
Glades. On a lagoon in one of the hardwood hummocks."
"I thought no one was
supposed to live out there except maybe some local Indians."
"Well, I think you know
that what's upposed to be and what is ain't necessarily the same thing."
Yeah. Jack knew that.
"You know where this
lagoon is?"
Carl nodded. "I guess
so."
"How do I get
there?"
"You don't, not unless
you know the way."
"Can you show me on a
map?"
Another shake of his head.
"It ain't marked on no maps. It's pretty well hid."
"Then how come you know
where it is?"
Carl looked away. "I
was born there."
This didn't surprise Jack.
He'd seen what the folks connected to the red pickup looked like, and figured
there had to be something wicked strange about Carl's right arm. Add that to
what Anya had said about the mutating effects of the Otherness leak at the
nexus point in the Glades, and the connection looked obvious.
He remembered other
misshapen people he'd met earlier in the year...Melanie Ehler and Frayne
Canfield...both had attributed their deformities to "a burst of
Otherness" during their gestations. Carl's story was most likely the same.
"All right then,"
Jack said, "take me there."
Carl backed away a step,
holding up his hand. "Nuh-uh. No way. I left there years ago and I ain't
goin back."
"Well, if it's not on a
map, and you can't tell me how to get there, and you won't take me there, how
am I supposed to find it?"
"You ain't. That's the
whole point."
As if to say he was through
talking, Carl bent over his putter and lined up a shot. He tapped the ball and
it went wide.
"I've good reason to
believe they caused my father's accident and were setting him up to be eaten by
an alligator when the police interrupted them."
Carl straightened and looked
at him. "Alligator? That woulda meant your daddy'd go the same way as the
others, killed by a swamp critter."
"Well, this wasn't no
ordinary swamp critter." Jeez, Jack thought. A couple of conversations
with this guy and I'm starting to talk like him. "This gator was huge,
with what looked like horns sticking out of its head."
Carl visibly shuddered.
"Devil. That could only be Devil."
"Who's Devil?"
"Big freaky bull gator
that hangs around the lagoon. But how on earth did they get him out of the
swamp?"
"Couldn't say. But it
seems Devil gets around. He visited Gateways last night."
"No way!"
"Way."
Jack gave him a Reader's
Digest version of the attack, leaving out Oyv's amazing feat and the gator's
inability to cross into Anya's yard. He remembered what his father had said
about Carl being the community gossip.
"I want to get a look
at this lagoon, Carl. I've already met the people, now I want to see where they
live."
"You met them?"
"In town yesterday. Met
that woman, too. The one with the white hair."
"Semelee."
"Right. What do you
know about her? Is she as spooky as she looks?"
"Can't rightly say. I
left the clan about-"
"Whoa! Are we talking
Kluxers here?"
"Naw. That's just what
we call ourselfs. We're all kinda related in a way."
"Yeah? How?"
Carl's good eye shifted away
again. "Not by blood or anything like that. More like we was all in the
same situation. Anyway, it was just us guys, maybe twenty of us, when she
showed up a couple years ago. I'd been kinda plannin on leavin anyway, but when
she showed up I took it as a sign and skeedaddled outta there."
"A sign of what?"
"That things in the
clan was gonna head south real soon. I mean, you got eighteen-twenty guys and
one woman, that's trouble."
"They seemed pretty
tight when I saw them in town yesterday."
"Yeah, well, maybe. I
seen em from a distance a couple times. We always done some panhandlin, but now
they's become like professionals. I stay away from em cause we ain't exactly on
good terms."
"Why not?"
"They was kinda pissed
I left. Luke-he was sorta kinda like the leader-he called me a traitor and all
sortsa stuff like that. But that don't matter to me. I'm glad I got out. I
didn't wanta live like them no more. Y'know, like gypsies. They live on the
boats or in what's left of a bunch of old Indian huts on the shore. No runnin
water, no lectricity, no TV." He shook his head. "Man, I sure do love
TV. Anyways, I wanted my own place where I didn't have to sleep next to nobody
cept myself."
"A room of one's
own," Jack murmured. He knew the feeling.
Carl grinned. "Hell, I
got more than just a room, I got me a whole trailer."
"But do you have any
money in the bank?" Jack said as an idea hit him.
"Naw. Pretty much
everthing gets spent just for livin."
"Okay, then. What say I
pay you a thousand bucks to take me to this lagoon?"
"A thousand?" Carl
laughed. "You're shittin me, right?"
"Nope. Five hundred
when we leave, and another five when we get back. That sound fair to you?"
Carl licked his lips.
"Yeah, but..."
"But what?"
"But they's gonna be
awful mad if they find I brung an outsider to the lagoon."
"Don't worry about
that." Jack flipped up the back of his shirt to show Carl the Glock.
"I'll get you back home. I promise. And anyway, if we go in the afternoon,
won't they all be in town, begging?"
"Come to think of it,
yeah. Specially this bein Friday."
"What's so special
about Friday?"
He shrugged. "Lotsa
people round here get paid on Thursdays, and on Fridays they're happy the work
week's over, so they're looser with their change. Saturday's pretty much the
same. But Sunday's usually a bust."
"Spent too much on
Saturday night, right?"
"Yeah. Or they just
come from church and did some givin there. Monday's even worse." He
scratched his jaw. "So yeah. We should have the lagoon pretty much to
ourselfs this afternoon."
"Then that's when we'll
go. A quick trip for a quick look-see. In and out. Easiest thousand you ever
made."
Carl took a breath.
"Okay. But since my car ain't workin, you gotta drive me down to the
waterside." He began picking up his golf balls. "Guess I better get
movin. Gotta get home, gotta find us a boat."
"How'd you get here
without a car?"
"Bike. How else?"
More power to you, pal, Jack
thought. Maybe the thousand would let Carl repair his junker Honda.
He got directions to Carl's
trailer park-it was the one Jack had seen between the auto body place and the
limestone quarry-and continued his jog.
2
Semelee stood with Luke a couple dozen feet from Devil's
gator hole and watched. The big gator lay half sunk in the water at the shady
end, his eyes closed. The water around his left flank wound was tinged red. At
first she thought he was dead, but then she saw his sides pull in a little as
he took a breath.
"He's still
bleeding," Luke said.
"I know," she said
through her clenched teeth. "I got eyes."
She felt so on edge this
morning she wanted to take a bite out of somebody.
Devil was the biggest gator
anybody'd ever seen, so it made sense he'd have the biggest gator hole in the
Glades. Like all gators, as the winter dry season began, he'd scrape out all
the vegetation from this low spot in the limestone floor and create a big
wallowing hole. Fish would work their way into it, turtles and frogs too, and
even some birds would come around to see if they could snag a quick meal.
Sometimes those birds and turtles became gator snacks.
In the wet summers gators
left their holes and spread out through the Glades, but not this year. The dry
spell made gator holes more important than ever.
The edges of Devil's hole
were piled high with muck he'd scraped out. This provided rootin soil for
things like cattails, swamp lilies, ferns and arrowleaf. Yellow-flowered
spatterdock lilies floated on the surface of the blood-tinged water.
Devil lifted his head and
let out a hoarse, rumbling bellow, then let it flop back down into the water as
if it was too heavy to hold up.
"He's hurt in, Luke.
Hurtin bad."
Because of me, she thought.
Guilt scalded her. She'd
considered Devil indestructible, invincible, almost supernatural. But he
wasn't. He was just a big, misshapen gator who would have been happy spendin
his days doin what gators do: lolling in his hole, eatin this and that, waitin
for the rains.
But no. Semelee couldn't let
him be. She had to roust him out of his comfy hole and lead him out of the
Glades into the outer world where he didn't belong. The result was he got hurt.
Hurt bad.
"He can't die,"
she said. "He just can't."
She had this terrible
feeling that if Devil died, part of the spirit of the Glades would die with
him. And it would be all her fault.
"It was that guy,"
Luke said. "That city guy you been takin a shine to. He done this."
"No, he didn't. I
already told you that. He didn't have nothin to do with hurt in Devil. It was
the old lady. She's the one. She's some sorta witch. So's her dog."
In a way Semelee was
secretly glad that the old witch's spell, or whatever it was, had kept Devil
out of her yard. Because she'd seen her man, the special one, place himself
between Devil and his father. She'd've had to go through him to get to the old
man, and that would've meant hurt in him, maybe even killin him, somethin she
definitely didn't want to do. But it had showed her that he was made of good
stuff. That was important.
"I say we do all three
of them-old lady, father, and son-and have done with it."
"No. I told you: The
son ain't to be touched."
Luke grumbled. "All
right. We'll have another go at the old guy, but the lady...what're you gonna
do about her?"
"Don't know yet. We
can'tdo her unless we can get to her. I'll think of somethin. But it'll have to
wait till the lights is done. I ain't lettin nothin get between me and the
lights."
"Awright. But what do
we do till the lights come? We goin panhandlin as usual?"
"Not durin the lights.
We'll just hang out. Besides, we don't need to go beggin cause we'll be gettin
a hunk of cash from those dredgin guys when they finish at noon."
"What if they try to
stiff us?"
"They won't. They ain't
gettin out of the lagoon less'n they pay up."
But Semelee didn't want to
think about dredgin or money or nothin cept the lights. Anticipation thrummed
through her like she was a plucked guitar string. The lights'd start tonight
and run for three days. But this year would be like no other. This time they
wouldn't be underwater, which meant they'd be bigger and brighter and better
than ever before.
Starting tonight, everything
in her life would change. She sensed it, she knew it.
3
Tom had been watching the Weather Channel's reports on
Hurricane Elvis. It continued to move south off Florida's west coast; although
its winds had increased to 90 miles an hour, it was still a Category I. And no
threat to Florida at this point.
He was just finishing his
cup of coffee when Jack came through the door, dripping with sweat.
"I was wondering where
you were." He'd been a little anxious after awakening to finding the house
empty and Jack's car still parked outside. Obviously he'd been out jogging.
"I don't suppose you'd care for a cup of hot coffee right now."
"After my shower I'd
love one. Never turn down coffee."
As Jack ducked into the
bathroom, Tom rinsed out the French press and began to make another serving. He
noticed his hand shaking a little as he spooned the ground coffee. He touched
the fresh bandage on his head. The stitches were still a little tender under
there. He'd been shocked at the sight of his bruised, black-eyed face in the
mirror this morning. He felt so good he'd almost forgotten about the accident.
Now he couldn't get it out
of his head. Someone wanted him dead. Why?
Last week his life had been
safe and sane, prosaic, maybe even a little dull. Now...
What was happening? He
didn't live the sort of life where he got on people's wrong side. Was it a
mistake? Had he been mistaken for somebody else? Who on earth would want to
kill him?
He pondered those
imponderables until Jack returned, in fresh shorts and T-shirt, his wet hair
combed straight back.
"Hey, good
coffee," he said after sipping the cup Tom had made for him.
"Colombian. I was
thinking of scrambling some eggs. Want some?"
"Sure. And some hash
browns and toast, and maybe some grits with extra butter. Oh, and while you're
at it, a side of biscuits and gravy."
Tom gave him a dour look.
Jack shrugged and smiled.
"Hey, we're in the south so I figured one of their traditional,
artery-clogging breakfasts would be in order."
"What do you know about
southern cooking?"
"There's a place called
Down Home a few blocks from where I live. In New York you can eat any style you
want."
"Right now," Tom
said, "I don't feel like eating at all. Hard to be hungry when there's
someone out to get you. If I knew who or why, maybe it wouldn't be so bad. I'd
still be scared, but..."
"Maybe I can help
there," Jack said softly.
"You? How?"
The phone rang. It was the
front gate, wanting to know if he was expecting any packages.
"Not that I know of.
Wait." He turned to Jack. "Are you expecting a delivery of some
sort?"
"Yeah!" He
grinned. "It's here already? Great. Good old Abe."
Tom told the gate to send
the truck through, then turned back to Jack.
"You were saying
something...?"
Jack cleared his throat.
"I checked out the medical records on Borger, Leo, and Neusner last night
and-"
"How on earth did you
do that?"
"I got in through one
of the clinic's windows."
"What?"
"No biggee. I popped
the lock on one and crawled through. Don't worry. You'd have to look pretty
close to the underside of the sash to even suspect someone was there."
Tom couldn't believe this.
His own son breaking and entering-and the clinic of all places.
"Dear God, why?"
"Stay calm. I wanted to
see if any of them had had physicals recently-the answer turned out to be yes
to all three, by the way-and to see how they did."
"What if it had an
alarm, or what if you were caught on camera? You could go to jail for something
like that!"
"Only if I got caught,
which I didn't. No alarm, no surveillance cameras. I checked that out first.
But I found what I was looking for: Each one of them passed their physical with
flying colors."
"A lot of good it did
them. They're all dead."
"I think they
diedbecause they passed with flying colors."
"Oh, you're not going
back to that Gateways conspiracy thing you were talking about yesterday, are
you?"
"Follow the money, Dad.
Whenever you wonder if something funny might be going on, follow the money. And
the money leads to Gateways."
Had he gone completely
paranoid?
"Jack-"
"Think about it: It's
only younger, healthy widows and widowers being attacked-the ones who stand the
best chance for holding on to their houses the longest. Coincidence?"
"You're talking about a
billion-dollar corporation, Jack. This is penny-ante stuff. Imagine the impact
of four extra resales in a year on a nine-digit bottom line. Meaningless!"
"It may be meaningless
globally, but what about locally? What if someone in Gateways South needs to
boost his bottom line and this is a way-just one of a number of ways, say-to do
it?"
Tom didn't know what to say.
Breaking into offices, digging up "clues"...he had to admire Jack's
initiative, and was touched that he'd go to all that trouble for him,
but...Jack seemed to think he was Philip Marlowe or Sam Spade. And he wasn't.
He was an appliance repairman, and he was going to get in over his head and in
deep trouble if he kept this up.
"I suppose you can make
a circumstantial case for it, but it just doesn't add up. You're implying that
Ramsey Weldon or someone at his level of management went out and hired those
men to smash up my car and then have me eaten by an alligator. It's
preposterous."
Jack scratched his head.
"I know it seems that way, but so far he and Gateways South are the only
ones I can see benefiting from your passing. I'll have to go with Weldon for
the time being."
Tom felt a surge of acid in
his stomach. "'Go with'? What does that mean?"
"Oh, I don't
know," Jack said with a smile that did nothing to relieve Tom's anxiety.
"Have a little tęte-ŕ-tęte or something like that."
"Don't. Please, don't.
You're just going to get yourself in trouble."
"Don't worry. I'll be
discreet. The very soul of discretion."
Somehow Tom doubted that.
But before he could say anything else, the doorbell rang.
"I'll get it,"
Jack said.
A delivery man stood at the
door holding a cardboard carton.
"I've got four packages
for 'Jack.'"
"That's me." Jack
took the box and placed it on the floor. "I'll help you with the
others."
As Jack followed the man
outside to his truck, Tom stepped over and looked at the return address:Bammo
Toy Co.
Toys?
He noticed too that the
shipping label was addressed to "Jack" at this address. No last name,
just "Jack." Odd.
When all four cartons were
inside the door, Jack tipped the driver, then lifted one of the boxes.
"I'm going to put these
in the spare bedroom, if you don't mind."
"Sure. Go ahead."
As Jack headed for the
bedroom, Tom lifted one of the packages to help. He hefted it...heavier than
he'd expected.
Jack had already relocated
the first box and almost ran into Tom in the bedroom doorway. He took the
package from him-rather quickly, Tom thought.
"Hey, no, Dad. Thanks,
but that's okay. I don't want you hurting your back."
"Don't be silly.
They're not that heavy."
He returned to the living
room and picked up another package. Jack was right behind him, hovering like a
mother hen.
"Dad, really-"
Tom ignored him and carried
the carton into the bedroom.
When all four were piled
against the wall, he said, "It says they're from a toy company. What kind
of toys are we talking about? Toy robots? I mean, they're heavy enough."
"Just toys." Jack
seemed tense.
"Do you mind showing me
one?"
A heartbeat's hesitation,
then Jack said, "I guess not. But we'll need a knife to cut the
tape."
"I'll get one."
Tom found an old serrated
steak knife in the kitchen drawer, but by the time he'd returned, Jack had the
smallest box already open.
He held up a folder with a
curved blade. "I forgot I had one in my pocket."
Inside, Tom saw an
odd-looking stuffed toy, some unidentifiable little animal a little bigger than
a football. "What's that?"
"It's a Pokemon. This
one's Pikachu. They were all the rage with kids a few years ago."
"But why are you buying
them?"
"I'll probably wind up
giving them to a local kids' charity."
Tom shook his head. What an
odd man his son had turned out to be.
4
Jack found Carl waiting on the street outside his trailer
park in knee-high green rubber boots; a short wooden paddle protruded from his
right sleeve.
"Where's the
boat?" Jack said as Carl slid into the passenger seat.
"It's waitin. A guy I
know's lettin me borrow it." He stuck out his hand. "My money?"
Jack handed him an envelope.
"As promised."
He'd come down with about a
thousand in cash. His deal with Carl was going to leave him short, so he'd stopped
at an ATM for an advance on the John L. Tyleski Visa card. Another envelope
with the balance of the fee was tucked into a back pocket.
Carl checked the contents.
Didn't take long to count five bills. The reverent way he touched them made
Jack wonder if Carl had ever seen that much money at once.
"I hope I ain't makin a
big mistake," he said, still staring into the envelope.
"Don't worry. A few
hours from now you'll be sitting in front of your TV with another one of those
in your pocket."
He sighed and folded the
envelope. "Okay. Let's go."
As they pulled away, Jack
noticed high chain-link fencing disappearing into the foliage; a rusted length
of chain with a beat-upNO TRESPASSING sign spanned a gap that looked like an entrance.
"That the quarry I've
heard about?" Jack said.
Carl nodded. "Some
company carved a mess of limestone blocks outta there, then went outta
business."
"What's it like down
there?"
Carl shrugged. "Just a
big hole in the ground. Used to have a big pool of water in its bottom, but not
this year."
"Much security?"
"None I ever seen. You
can't steal a hole in the ground. Kids sneak in there at night to drink, smoke
dope, and screw. Never seen anyone kick em out. Why you so interested?"
"Just curious."
Jack hoped it wouldn't be
necessary, but if worse came to worst, he might have use for the quarry.
He followed Carl's
directions, turning this way and that, heading in a generally northwest
direction. Along the way he saw a black bird with a red head pecking at
something on the side of the road.
"Christ, that's an ugly
bird."
"That's a turkey
vulture-'TV,' for short. Right homely, aren't they. Good thing about them is
they clean up roadkill. They do such a good job that round here we call
roadkill 'TV dinners.'" He snickered. "'TV dinners.' Get it?"
"I get it, Carl."
The vegetation became
reedier as they rolled along. Finally Carl pointed to a small building with a
bigAIR BOATS sign. Another, smaller sign-not much more than a slim board with a
handwritten message-had been tacked to the bottom.
CLOSED DO TO DROWT.
Jack wondered what the
owners were doing with all this extra spare time. Playing Scrabble maybe?
"We're going on an air
boat?" He'd seen them whizzing across the Everglades in movies and nature
shows and had always wanted to ride one. "Cool."
"Can't use no air boats
when it's this dry. There's enough water in the big channels, but the little
ones-forget it."
Jack followed Carl around to
the rear of the shack where a beached canoe waited on the mud.
"That's our boat?"
"That's her," Carl
said with a grin. "She ain't too pan-o-ramic, but she's got a motor."
Jack looked at the tiny,
odd-shaped hunk of steel clamped to the right rear stern.
"You call that a motor?
I've seen bigger eggbeaters."
"Don't knock it. It's
better'n paddlin the whole way."
Carl stepped into the water
and pulled the canoe off the mud. He hopped into the stern seat and used the
paddle jutting from his right sleeve to steady the boat. Jack had no choice but
to wade in, sneakers and all, after him.
"Didn't you bring no
boots?"
"Ain't got no
boots." There I go, talking like him again.
Jack was calf high in water
before he reached the canoe and eased himself onto the forward bench. Carl
primed the motor, then: a couple of quick pulls on the cord, a cloud of smoke,
a bubbling clatter, and-hi-yo, Silver-they were off.
Jack looked down at the
sodden legs of his jeans, and his once white sneakers, now tinted brown with
mud. His feet squished and squeaked inside them.
Swell.
"This channel's usually
so much deeper and wider this time of year. And most of this saw grass is half
underwater." He shook his head. "Man, we really need us some
rain."
Jack looked up. A lid of
clouds had moved in, hiding the sun and the sky, but none of them looked like
rain clouds.
"What you need down
here, Carl, is a big storm, a hurricane to dump a load of water. Maybe Elvis
will take care of your drought."
"I'd go for a tropical
storm, okay. You know-thirty-five-or forty-milean-hour winds and a ton of rain.
I could handle that. But no hurricane, thank you. I was here when Andrew came
through and I don't never want to see the likes of that again."
As they slid along, Jack
heard a call and response of throaty roars from either side.
"Those
alligators?"
"Yep. Bulls callin from
their gator holes."
"What are those
grunting sounds? The females?"
Carl laughed. "Naw.
Them's pig frogs. Got the name cause they grunt like pigs."
Jack noticed lots of snails,
with shells maybe an inch to an inch and a half across, floating near the
surface. The tops of some of their shells broke the surface as they clung to
underwater growths. He saw little pristine white beads lined up on blades of
saw grass and asked Carl about them.
"Those're snail eggs.
Cormorants love the snails. Use the hook on the end of their beak to yank them
from their shells."
A goose-necked turtle with a
smooth brown shell and an uncircumcised nose stuck its head above the water and
looked at him.
"Hello," Jack
said.
The turtle ducked away.
"That's a soft-shelled
turtle. Gators justlove to catch those. Gobble them up like crunchy
tacos."
Jack slapped at his neck. He
didn't have a long-sleeved shirt so he'd sprayed on lots of repellent, but it
didn't seem to be helping much.
"How can you stand all
these mosquitoes?"
"All?You kidding? This
is a good year, agreat year for mosquitoes. The drought dried up most of their
little breedin pools."
If this is a good year, Jack
thought, remind me to stay far away in a bad one.
He reached out a hand to
grab a few of the long thin blades of grass brushing the side of the canoe. A
sharp sting made him snatch it back. He looked and found long scratches across
his palm.
Carl laughed. "Now you
know why they call it saw grass." He swept his paddle around in a wide
arc. "Pa-hay-okee."
Jack remembered Anya using
that word.
"Indian, right? Means
'river of grass' or something?"
Carl grinned. "Hey, you
been studyin."
A river of grass...seaof
grass was more like it. An ocean of browned saw grass swept away in all
directions, dotted here and there by islandlike hummocks of cypress, oak, and
pine that looked like giant green mushrooms sprouting from a dead lawn. He
hoped it wasn't dead. Just sleeping.
So flat, so like he'd
envisioned Kansas might be. Too open for Jack. He was used to living in steel-,
concrete-, and glass-lined canyons. The horizon seemed so far away here. Who
needed a horizon anyway? Horizons gave him the creeps. He could live very well
without one. In fact, back home he did.
Why on earth would anyone
want to live out here? No deli, no pizza delivery, no electricity to keep beer
cold. Like living in the Dark Ages.
Carl said, "I got
Miccosukee blood in me, you know. At least that's what my momma told me.
They've got a reservation north of here off Route 41, and even a casino, but I
ain't never been to neither. The Miccosukee's on my momma's side. Don't know
bout my dad. My momma met him at the lagoon. I hear he didn't hang around after
he seen me. Just took off and we never heard from him again."
Jack flicked a glance at
Carl's covered right arm. Should he ask about it?
Maybe some other time.
Instead he said, "So
there's been people living around this lagoon for generations?"
"Yeah and no,"
Carl said. "The only people livin there now are the kids of the ones who
used to live there. Everybody moved away when we was itty-bitty babies because
they thought the lagoon was makin us all strange. But we kids came back."
"Why?"
"Cause I guess we
didn't seem to fit no other place."
Jack tried to think of a
delicate way to say this. "Because of the way you all looked?"
Carl shrugged. "Some of
that, maybe. But mostly because the lagoon seemed right for us. It felt
like...home."
"You moved out,
though."
"Yeah. But not far.
That's why I wasn't too excited bout goin back. I'm afraid I might get sucked
in again."
"So how many live
there?"
"Bout twenty. We're all
bout the same age too, give or take a couple years."
Jack ducked as a big bird
with an enormous wingspan swooped above them.
"What the hell is
that?"
"Just a big ol'
heron."
"Oh."
For a moment there Jack had
thought it was a pterodactyl. Or maybe a pteranodon. Whatever. The one with the
tail.
They began to pass
alligators of various sizes sunning themselves on the banks, but none came even
close in size to the monster from yesterday.
Jack heard a scraping sound
from the bottom of the canoe.
"That's all for the
motor for a while," Carl said.
They used their paddles
until the channel grew too shallow even for that.
"What do we do
now?"
Carl rose and stepped out of
the boat. "We carry her till the water gets deeper."
Easy for you to say, Jack
thought. You've got boots.
The hauling itself wasn't so
bad-only about thirty yards before the water deepened again-but the knowledge
that a gator might step out of the surrounding greenery at any second upped
Jack's pace until he was fairly dragging Carl behind him.
"Too bad they don't do
aSurvivor down here," Carl said."Survivor: Everglades ...they'd never
let me on, but I know I could win that million."
Another reality show. Carl
did like his TV.
Jack looked over his
shoulder. "If you did win, what's the first thing you'd do?"
"Get me a new TV."
He grinned. "One of them big sixty-inch models. Oh, and a new easy chair,
an electric one that massages your back while you're sittin in it. And get my
car fixed."
"How about
travel?"
"What for? I've already
been all over the world watchinSurvivor andCelebrity Mole and the Travel
Channel."
"But it's not the same
as being there."
Listen to me, Jack thought.
The guy who never leaves New York.
"Is for me," Carl
said. "Oh, yeah, and I'd probably give some money to Mrs. Hansen. She's
havin a hard time. Might lose her trailer."
"That's a nice thought,
Carl."
He shrugged. "Just bein
neighborly."
Back in the water and
putt-putting along again, Jack saw larger plants starting to crowd the saw
grass off the banks. Ferns and trees fought for space. Jack spotted a
fruit-bearing tree.
"What's that?"
"Pond apple. Don't even
think about eatin one less you're partial to the taste of kerosene."
He went on to point out
willows that didn't look like willows, live oaks that didn't look like oaks,
and trees with exotic names like cocoa plum and Brazilian pepper.
Jack pointed to the tall,
scraggly, droopy-needled, cedarlike pines that loomed ahead.
"What are those?"
Carl looked at him as if
he'd asked if the sun rose in the east or the west.
"Them's
cypresses."
"They look like
pines."
"Yeah, I guess they do.
But they drop their needles come winter. Pines don't do that."
Jack noticed that the leaves
on some of the live oaks were turning red or orange, as if it were fall. The
drought, he guessed.
As they glided nearer the
cypresses, Jack saw long, gray-brown Merlin beards of moss hanging from the
limbs and swaying in the breeze.
He spotted other trees. He
knew a Nelson pine when he saw one; royal palms had that distinctive smooth
sleeve of green at the upper end of the trunk, and of course coconut palms and
banana palms were identifiable by their fruit. But the rest were mysteries.
Carl pointed to a couple of
dragonflies, one riding on the back of another.
"Looky there. Makin
baby dragonflies."
"And in public,"
Jack said. "Have they no shame?"
Carl laughed. "Hey,
don't knock it. Dragonflies eats up tons of mosquito babies."
"Yeah?" Jack
raised a fist in salute. "Go for it, you two!"
Carl shut off the motor.
"What's up?" Jack
said. "More shallows?"
Carl shook his head and
pointed. "We're getting close now. See that big hardwood hummock dead
ahead?"
Jack saw a rise studded with
trees of all different sizes and shapes that blocked most of the western horizon.
"The lagoon's in
there," Carl said. "So we got to go real quiet now."
"I thought the place
was going to be deserted."
"Y'never know.
Sometimes somebody's feelin poorly and they don't go to town."
Jack pulled the Glock from
itsSOB holster, worked the slide to chamber a round, then tucked it away again.
They paddled ahead to where
the channel ran into a dense green tunnel of vegetation. Speaking softly, Carl
pointed out gumbo limbo trees, aerial plants, orchids, ferns, banyan trees with
their dangling aerial roots, coffee plants, vines trailing from tree to tree,
and every imaginable variety of palm.
"Looks like a rain
forest," Jack whispered.
Carl nodded. "Yeah.
Even now, when there ain't no rain. It stays wetter here cause the sun can't
get through."
As they paddled around a few
more bends in the channel Jack started noticing subtle changes in the greenery,
most obvious in the royal palms. Every one Jack had seen till now had had a
ramrod-straight trunk. These were bent here and there at odd intervals along
their lengths.
Was this the first evidence
of the mutation effects of Anya's so-called nexus point?
Then Carl turned to him and
put a finger to his lips. He nodded and made a hooking motion with his arm.
Jack got the message: almost
there...around the next bend.
And then they rounded that
bend and the right bank fell away, opening into a wide pond, 150, maybe 200
feet across. The surface lay smooth and placid, but the surrounding vegetation
was anything but.
The willows, oaks,
cypresses, and palms lining the banks had been twisted into grotesque,
unnatural shapes, as if they'd been frozen mid-step in some epileptic ballet.
And in one area they all appeared to be leaning away from an opening on the
edge of the bank, as if trying to escape it.
That had to be it-the nexus
point, where a little of the Otherness slipped through a couple of times a
year. Anya hadn't been exaggerating about the mutations. The vegetation looked
like it had been designed by someone with PCP for blood.
All we need to make this
scene complete, Jack thought, is the Creature from the Black Lagoon rearing its
ugly head.
A large, skiff-style
boat,Bull-ship across its stern, rocked gently against the far bank. Its crude,
ramshackle superstructure looked like it had been built by someone with only
rudimentary carpentry skills. Another smaller, equally rundown skiff, theHorse-ship
-cute-lay directly to their right. They looked like floating tenements.
As he and Carl glided toward
the center of the lagoon, Jack searched the banks for stray members of Carl's
clan. Just as predicted, the place was deserted.
Well, itlooked deserted.
Somehow it didn'tfeel deserted.
"That's funny,"
Carl whispered, pointing to a small fleet of canoes beached on the far bank.
"All the boats is here. If they went into town-"
"Well, well,
well," said a gruff voice from behind and to the right. "Look who's
here."
Jack started at the sound
and swiveled to see half a dozen men standing on the deck of theHorse-ship . As
he watched, the snow-haired Semelee emerged from the superstructure and smiled
at him.
"Hi, Jack," she
said.
Jack noticed the color
draining from Carl's face. "Oh, shit!"
Jack faced front again and
saw another dozen or so men gathering on the deck of the biggerBull-ship .
"Paddle!" Carl
cried as he began yanking on the little motor's starter cord. "We gotta
get outta here!"
Jack thought that might not
be a bad idea. He reversed his oar stroke to turn the canoe around, but then
noticed that the men in theHorse-ship were poling it across the lagoon
entrance, blocking their escape route.
He laid a hand on Carl's
shoulder. "Forget it, Carl. Looks like we're staying awhile."
"Long time, no see,
Carl," said the big guy Jack had run into in town. His grin was feral.
"I knew you'd be back someday."
"Hey, Luke," Carl
said in a faint voice. His shoulders slumped. He looked defeated.
Jack checked the comforting
weight of the Glock at the small of his back. Not the right time to reveal what
he was carrying, especially when they were such sitting ducks out here on the
water. Better to wait and see what happened, wait till these guys got closer,
or things got ugly.
Who knew? Maybe he wouldn't
need artillery. Maybe he'd even come away with some answers. Like, what do you
have against my father? Or, who hired you to kill him?
"Knew I shouldn'ta
come," Carl muttered. His good eye veered right and left like a frightened
rabbit on the run.
"Easy," Jack
whispered. "I promised I'd get you back to your trailer, and I will. Let's
just go with the flow here for a bit."
"Don't see's we got
much choice."
Luke pointed to the row of
canoes on the bank. "Why dontcha beach it over there with the
others," he called, "and we'll all get real friendly like."
Jack started paddling.
"Let's do like the man says."
Carl hesitated a few
heartbeats-he seemed frozen in place-then shook himself and joined in.
5
When they reached the far bank, some of the men from
theBull-ship helped pull its nose onto the dirt. Jack recognized the
flat-bottomed motorboat he'd seen Semelee ride away in-theChicken-ship . Next
to it was a canoe labeledNo-ship . Someone in the clan was a regular Shecky
Green.
He managed to step ashore
without resoaking his sneakers, but Carl got out and waded.
They all seemed to know
Carl. A few acted genuinely glad to see him but most were standoffish, some
even hostile.
As Jack and Carl stood
together and waited for theHorse-ship to be poled over, Jack looked around.
Close up, the vegetation looked even more demented. Back from the banks, maybe
a hundred feet, stood half a dozen hutlike structures with open sides. Each
seemed to be little more than half a dozen wobbly poles, three to a side,
topped by a pitched roof of dried palm fronds. A small fire smoldered between
two of the nearest. When they weren't on the boats, Jack guessed they lived
there.
Crooked men in crooked houses.
He had little doubt that each contained at least one crooked mouse.
"Old Indian huts,"
Carl said, following his gaze. "Been there forever."
When the smaller boat
arrived, Semelee was the first to step off, followed by Luke, bulge-browed
Corley, and the rest. Soon the whole clan was assembled behind her, facing Jack
and Carl in a semicircle.
Circe and her pigs.
A single woman with-Jack had
made a quick count-eighteen men.
One scary looking bunch,
Jack thought, eyeing their misshapen heads, mismatched limbs, and twisted
bodies. Looked like they'd suffered an algae bloom in their gene pool. But he
knew that, just like the trees, it must be due to the nexus point. The trees
had no choice about where they grew, but these folks...why did they stay?
Only Semelee and Luke looked
reasonably normal...if you discounted her wild white Medusa hair. Storm from
the X-Men had nothing on Semelee in the hair department. She wore the same
Levi's and tight black vest as yesterday, but her long-sleeved shirt was red
this time, with the top two buttons left open.
"Who's this one?"
she said, pointing to Carl. "He's one of us, ain't he."
Luke flashed his nasty grin
at Carl. "He sure is. He just don't act like it."
"How come I ain't never
seen him before?"
"You probably did but
just don't remember. Carl decided to leave right after you showed up. I don't
think we're good enough for him no more." He stepped closer. "Ain't
that right, Carl? Ain't that right? But that was okay. This ain't no prison.
You can come and go as you please." He got into Carl's face. "But
that don't mean you can bring outsiders. You know the rule about
outsiders."
He reached to grab the front
of Carl's shirt and Jack laid a hand on his arm-gently but firmly. He wasn't
looking for a fight, not against these impossible odds, but he was not about to
let Carl be manhandled.
"Don't," Jack
said.
Luke's fingers stopped
inches from Carl's shirtfront. "What?"
Jack kept his voice low but
gave Luke a hard look, hoping he'd think twice. He didn't have a plan-he'd been
expecting an empty lagoon-but he was willing to ad lib, maybe do something
quick and very nasty to make a point and throw the crowd off balance.
"Just...don't."
Luke glared at him, then
glanced toward the water. "Back off or you'll be goin for a swim."
"Doesn't sound so bad
to me."
"Yeah?" He
grinned. "Look who you'll be swimmin with."
Jack turned and saw what
appeared to be a giant turtle gliding toward shore. Its head was down but its
mossy, four-foot long shell looked like a relief map of the Himalayas.
Then it raised its head-and
then its other head. Christ, it had two-big, ugly, rough-hewn things-both of
which were now angled up, their beaked, sharp-edged jaws agape, showing huge
mouths that could fit a regulation NFL football with room to spare. Its four
beady black eyes were fixed on Semelee as it reached the bank and waited with
its long, snakelike tail thrashing back and forth in the water behind it.
Luke grabbed a fallen tree
branch and shouted, "Show time!" He stepped closer and lowered the
branch toward the waiting jaws. "This here's a alligator snapper. When you
take your swim-and we'll see that you do-here's what's gonna happen to your
arms and legs."
The branch came to within a
foot of the left head and in a flash the neck telescoped out and the jaws
chomped, breaking it in half with a loud crunchingcrack , as easily as Jack
might snap a toothpick. One of the halves tumbled into the right head's strike
zone and suffered a similar fate. Three pieces of branch floated on the water.
Jack's tongue tasted dusty.
"'When'?" Jack
said, knowing this many guys would have no trouble tossing him into the water.
But he couldn't back down. "You mean 'if,' don't you?"
Luke stepped toward him.
"No, I mean-"
"Just hold on
there," Semelee said, wedging herself between them. "Ease up. This
ain't no way to treat company." She turned to Jack. Her eyes locked on
his, displaying none of the animosity radiating from Luke. "What're you
doing here?"
Jack had his reply ready.
"You suggested we have a drink together. Well, here I am."
"Bullshit!" Luke
said.
This guy had one helluva
chip on his shoulder.
Semelee ignored him and
smiled. "Yeah. I can see you're here. But I meant back in town."
"I guess I
misunderstood. I happened to mention you to Carl and-"
"You did?" Her
face lit as her smile broadened. "You were talking about me?"
Jack realized with a start
that she was infatuated with him. He couldn't fathom why. She'd had a couple of
glimpses of him and they'd exchanged a few sentences; she didn't know anything
about him.
Or did she?
Jack debated playing to her
infatuation, then discarded the idea. It could backfire too easily, especially
with the jealousy he sensed seething in Luke. It was plain that he wanted
Semelee looking at him like she was looking at Jack.
"Yeah, sort of,"
Jack said, keeping it neutral. "When Carl said he knew where you lived, I
convinced him to take me there."
"And here you
are."
"Right. But I wasn't
expecting such an unfriendly reception."
"Oh, don't take Luke
too serious. He's been right cranky lately." She patted his arm.
"Ain't that right, Luke."
The big guy only glowered at
Jack.
"Hey," said Carl,
pointing along the bank with his oar. "Don't tell me that's the lights
hole!"
"It sure is,"
Semelee said. "Want to see?"
Lights hole? Jack wondered.
What's a lights hole?
Semelee led the way toward a
patch of ground completely bare of vegetation. Jack followed Carl. The crowd
parted to let them pass. The center of the bald area was pierced by a roughly
oval opening, maybe eight feet across. It ran straight down into the limestone
like a well. Jack even knew what it was called: a cenote.
He stopped next to Carl at
the edge and peered down. Deep. Deeper than he'd expected. He could just barely
make out the pool at the bottom.
Carl gasped. "It wasn't
never this deep. What happened to the sand?"
Luke grunted. "Semelee
sold it. Some guys came here and sucked a whole lot of it out. You just missed
them."
"Got a pretty penny for
it too," she said.
Carl looked from Luke to
Semelee. "Looks like I ain't the first to break the no-outsiders
rule."
Score one for you, Carl,
Jack thought.
"That was
different," Semelee said.
Carl didn't seem to hear.
His eyes were fixed on the hole.
"I was a-fearin
this," he said, "what with the drought'n all. The lights hole ain't
never been above water before. That's bad enough. But then you went'n had sand
sucked out."
"Why's that bad?"
Semelee said. "I think that's good."
"Good? How can it be
good? The light used to have to come up through the sand and the water, and
even then, look what it did to us. Now there ain't hardly nothin in the
way."
Semelee grinned. "Ain't
it cool?"
"Nuh-uh. That ain't
cool. That's scary."
Jack knelt at the edge and
peered into the depths. He didn't like deep holes, at least not since the
spring when he'd had a bad experience with one out on Long Island. But that one
hadn't had a bottom. This one...
He found a thumb-size stone
and dropped it. He heard a satisfyingplop , saw ripples on the water far below.
...this one definitely had a
bottom.
But for how long?
"What are these lights
like?" he asked.
Semelee squatted close
beside him. He glanced up briefly and noticed the others wandering off. The two
of them had the hole to themselves.
"Like nothin you ever
seen in your life." Her voice was full of hushed wonder as she spoke.
"I mean, whoever heard of lights comin outta the ground?"
Jack had seen light shooting
up from a hole in the earth...just last spring.
"What color are these
lights?"
"Sorta like pinkish
orange, but that ain't right. Every time you think you got the color pinned, it
melts into somethin else just a teeny bit different. I can't describe it. You
gotta see it to believe it."
Jack believed. He'd seen a
light just like she described.
"How often do they
come?" Jack asked, knowing the answer.
"Twice a year."
"No kidding. When's the
next show?"
"Tonight."
"But-" Jack caught
himself. Anya had said the nexus points opened during the equinoxes, but that
wasn't until tomorrow night. He knew; he'd checked. But if he admitted that,
Semelee would realize that he knew way more than he should.
She frowned at him.
"But what?"
What to say? "But
that's too soon!" he blurted. "I won't be able to get my cameras set
up for-"
"Who said anything bout
cameras?"
"Well, it's obvious,
isn't it? I take some pictures of the lights and we sell them to the papers, to
National Geographic, to-"
"Wait-wait-wait,"
she said, waving her hands in front of his face. "What makes you think
you're gonna take pictures? Nobody takes no pictures of the lights."
"No exceptions?"
"No way, no how. As a
matter of fact, I can't even let you see them, cause then you'd talk about
them."
"No, I wouldn't."
Jack had no desire to see
these lights, but he didn't want to appear anxious to leave. Maybe the way to
get out of here was to pretend to want to stay.
Semelee shook her head.
"Maybe you wouldn't, but I can't risk it. Not yet, anyways. But maybe when
I get to know you better..."
Jack noted how she said
"when" instead of "if."
"What's wrong with
getting to know each other now? We could go back to town, have that drink,
maybe two or three, and do some serious talking."
"Not tonight, or
tomorrow or the next night, for that matter."
"Why not?"
"The lights run for
three nights. I gotta be here for that. But after Sunday..." She leaned
closer and he caught her pleasant, musky scent. ".... We got all the time
in the world."
That's what you think,
sister.
But he had to be careful
here...hell hath no fury and all that.
Then he noticed the black
shell dangling from the thong around her neck. The same size and shape as the
one he'd found in his father's hospital room. Even had a hole drilled at the
hinge end. Had to be the same.
He pointed to the shell.
"How'd you get that back?"
Semelee started and clutched
the shell. Jack figured from the sudden widening of her eyes that she hadn't
wanted him to see it. Because that meant she'd visited the room a second
time-and he didn't like that one bit.
But if that were the case,
why had she worn it around her neck and left the collar loose?
"What do you
mean?" she said.
"I found it by my
father's bed in the hospital, right after you were there. When did you go back
for it?"
"I...I didn't."
She kept the shell wrapped in her fist. "I had two."
"Oh." That made
Jack feel a little better-if she was telling the truth. "I guess I saw the
other one then."
"Where?" She
grabbed his wrist. "Where'd you see it last?"
Jack was about to shrug and
say he'd left it on the bedside table and assumed the housekeeping staff had
chucked it out, but her tight grip on his arm and the intensity in her eyes
made him hold off.
"I'm not sure. Let me
think..."
Why was a damn shell so
important?
He glanced around and
noticed Carl was missing.
"Carl?" Jack broke
Semelee's grip on his arm as he rose to his feet and scanned the lagoon banks.
"Hey, Carl! Where are you?"
"Never mind him,"
Semelee said, rising with him. "What about that shell?"
Jack left her behind. He
skirted the edge of the cenote and headed in the direction of the huts where he
saw a number of the men sitting around the little fire, smoking, drinking, but
Carl wasn't among them.
Shit! Where was he?
He called his name a few
more times but got no response. He asked the group by the fire where he was but
they ignored him.
Jack's gut began a little
crawl. If they'd done anything to Carl it would be Jack's fault for inducing
him to come back here.
Luke strolled up to the
fire. The men around it looked up, their mismatched eyes questioning, and he
nodded to them.
"Where is he,
Luke?" Jack said.
Luke didn't look up, didn't
turn, didn't acknowledge Jack's existence.
Jack's concern boiled over
into anger. He pulled the Glock and sent a round into the fire. The
mini-explosion of ash and flaming embers scattered the men, sending them
rolling and tumbling. Luke ducked away and faced him.
Now he had their attention.
"I'm going to say it
once more, and this time I'd better get an answer: Where...is...Carl?"
"Right where he
belongs," Luke said. "With us."
"He doesn't want to be
with you. He left, remember?"
"Maybe. But he's had a
change of heart. He's gonna stay."
Jack sensed movement around
him. His peripheral vision caught about a dozen clan members scurrying toward
him, armed with rifles and shotguns. Should have figured they'd be
armed-couldn't live out here and not do some hunting.
The newcomers didn't seem to
give Luke much of a boost in confidence, especially when Jack pointed the Glock
at the center of his chest. "I want to hear that from him."
Luke's eyes darted left and
right. He seemed about to say something when Semelee spoke up.
"Don't worry, Luke. He
ain't gonna kill you."
Jack glanced left and saw
her standing a few feet away, smiling at him.
"Right, mister,"
Luke said, licking his lips. "That's because you'll be full of holes if
you do."
"That won't make you
any less dead."
"You won't,"
Semelee said to Jack. "I know it, and you know it."
She was right. This wasn't a
killing situation. He lowered the pistol a few inches.
"Maybe not. But one of
these hollowpoints can mess up a knee like you wouldn't believe."
Luke was sweating now.
Taking one in the knee seemed to bother him more than one in the chest.
"Semelee...?"
"You won't do that
neither. Because we ain't hurt Carl and we ain't keepin him here but for a few
days."
"You've got no right to
keep him a minute."
"Yeah, we do,"
Luke said, emboldened by the fact that Jack hadn't pulled the trigger again.
"He's kin. He's blood."
"I promised I'd get him
back home. I intend to keep that promise."
"It's only gonna be
three days," Semelee said. "We want him to stay for the lights. But I
tell you what: You find my other shell and we'll do a trade...the shell for
Carl."
"Semelee," Luke
said. "You got no right. Carl belongs here."
She turned on him, eyes
flashing. "What's more important-givin Carl a light show or gettin my
eye-shell back?"
Luke looked away and said
nothin.
Semelee turned to Jack.
"So that's the deal. How's it set with you?"
"Lady, I don't know
where this shell of yours is. If I'd known it was going to matter, I'd have
kept track of it."
She pointed to Carl's
borrowed canoe. "Maybe you'd better start lookin."
Keeping his pistol trained
on Luke, Jack considered his options. He had a few, but didn't like any of
them.
He could do a little
shooting, but he could see how that could turn counterproductive. He could do
his own search for Carl, but he'd be a stranger looking for someone who'd been
stashed away by folks who knew every nook and cranny of the terrain. He could
head back and take one of these guys with him, then trade him back for Carl;
but Jack had no place to stash him.
Or he could go back and find
the shell, which was one tall order.
Going back...there was
another challenge. He wasn't Woodsman Jack. The closest he ever wanted to get
to outdoor life was a copy ofField & Stream .
"I don't know the
Everglades," he said. "I'll get lost out there."
Semelee laughed, a musical
sound, void of harshness or derision.
"No, you won't. The
drought ain't left too many wet channels. Every time you come to a fork, just
take the eastmost. It ain't all that far."
"And if I do find this
shell, how will I let you know?"
"Easy. Just stand
outside you daddy's house and say, 'I found the shell.' I'll hear you."
Jack didn't think she was
lying, and that gave him the creeps.
"All right," he
said. "I'll go." He hated to leave without Carl, but he'd be back. He
also hated leaving without satisfying the reason he'd come here in the first
place. "But I want to know something before I go: What have you got
against my father?"
Semelee looked away, then
back to him. "Nothin."
"Like hell. You folks
tried to kill him the other night, and somehow sicced that freaky alligator on
him yesterday. Let me ask you: What did he ever do to you?"
"We ain't after
him," she said.
Jack caught Luke giving her
a sharp look, but she didn't see it.
"Why don't I believe
that?" Jack said.
She shrugged. "That's
up to you. But I tell you true, your daddy ain't got nothin to fear from
us."
"How about me?"
Jack said. "What happens when I turn my back on you and your clan?"
"Nothin. You can't find
me my shell if you're dead, now, can you." She turned to the clan.
"Ain't that right, fellers." They looked at one another but didn't say
much. Semelee's expression turned fierce. "Ain't thatright ? Cause I hate
to think what would happen to anybody who stopped this man from doin what I
need him to do."
Jack saw a lot of uneasy,
fearful expressions as the men nodded and lowered their weapons.
What kind of hold did she
have on them? What could that slim little woman threaten them with?
Taking a breath and hoping
he wasn't making a mistake, Jack holstered the Glock and walked back to the
canoe. He stepped into the water, pushed off, and slid in. A couple of pulls
got the engine going. He putted away, propelled by the weight of dozens of eyes
on his back.
6
"Why'd you let him go?" Luke said.
Semelee stood on the bank
and watched Jack's retreating form as he turned the canoe left and disappeared
around the bend.
"Told you why."
"You believe him?"
She could hear lots of anger
in his voice. She knew he was jealous, but she figgered his pride had got hurt
bein on the wrong end of Jack's gun.
"Yeah, I do."
She wasn't sure why, but she
had the feeling that he'd thought there was only one shell until she told him
otherwise.
"You're actin like a
fool, Semelee. We coulda gone lookin for that eye-shell ourselfs."
"Yeah? Like where? Like
how? We can't go to the hospital and ask about it when I wasn't supposed to be
there in the first place. We can't search his daddy's place like he can."
"We coulda tried. Way
it stands now we ain't never gonna see him or your other eye-shell again."
"Oh, we'll see him
again...one way or the other."
"What's that supposed
to mean?"
"Didn't you hear him?
He said he promised Carl he'd get him back home. If he finds the shell he'll be
back to make the trade. But even if he don't find it he'll be comin for Carl.
He'll take him home again or spread a whole lotta hurt tryin."
Luke snorted. "What
makes you think you know so much about him? You ain't spoke to him but
twice."
She turned to him. "Let
me tell you somethin, Luke. That's a man who keeps his promises."
She'd seen that in his eyes.
Not a lick of fear, just stubborn as all get out. And that made him all the
more special. Brave and loyal, two traits any woman wanted in a man. But Jack
wasn't just any woman's man. He was destined to be hers.
The way things was fallin
into place...it was like it was all part of a plan. His daddy gets chosen to
die, but he don't. He lives and that brings Jack down here where he and Semelee
can meet and be together. She lost an eye-shell, but now Jack was gonna find it,
and that was gonna bring them even closer together.
"What do you need that
other eye-shell so bad for anyway?" Luke said. "You been doin all
right with just the one."
"No, I ain't. Ain't the
same. Much harder to keep control and see where I'm goin. I need the two of
them."
"Awright awright. But
you was kiddin bout layin off his daddy, right?"
"Wrong. We ain't
interested in his daddy no more."
"But Se me-"
"We got us a new
target."
She didn't know how, but
Jack had somehow connected her and the clan to what had happened to his daddy.
If his daddy got killed, he'd blame her, and that might keep them apart and
wreck their destiny. No, she had a better victim, someone whoneeded killin.
Luke was starin at her.
"Who?"
"The old lady. She'll
be takin daddy's place."
7
How was he going to find that damn shell?
The question plagued Jack as
he drove toward Novaton.
Semelee had been right: It
hadn't been all that hard to find his way back to the real world. He'd left the
canoe beached by the air-boat dock and headed toward town. The clouds persisted
but hadn't dumped drop one of rain.
Where to start? The hospital
was the obvious place, but Dad had checked himself out almost twenty-four hours
ago. Jack was sure the room had been stripped and scrubbed by now. Probably
even had a new occupant. That meant he might have to go pawing through the
hospital's Dumpsters.
He shook his head. Maybe if
he had half a dozen people helping him they might-justmight -come up with that
shell. He doubted it.
He decided that before he
gave the hospital another thought, he'd check out his dad's place. Maybe by
some freaky turn of good luck the shell had wound up there. But again, the
chances-
If nothing else, he could
get out of these sodden sneakers.
He'd stopped at a red light.
A dump truck was turning in front of him, going the opposite way. He wouldn't
have given it a second thought except for the insignia on the door of the cab.
It looked like a black sun...a shape that might be mistaken for the head of a
black flower.
Jack would have hung a U
right there if he'd been in the left lane. Instead he had to cut through two
parking lots to turn himself around. By the time he was heading north, the
truck was out of sight. Racing along as best he could in the Friday afternoon
traffic, trying to catch up, he almost missed the truck parked in a Burger King
lot.
Jack pulled in next to it
and got out. It had been backed diagonally across two spaces at the rear of the
lot where it was out of the way. The cab was empty but the big diesel engine
was running. He checked out the logo-definitely a black sun. And beneath it:Wm.
Blagden & Sons, Inc.
He walked around it. It sure
as hell looked big enough to inflict heavy damage on any car, even a Grand
Marquis. He wondered what the left end of the front bumper looked like.
Jack stopped and stared at
the dent in the fender...and the streaks of silver paint ground into its black
surface.
"Can I help you with
something?" said a voice behind him.
Jack turned to find a
prototypical truck driver-big cowboy hat, big gut, big belt buckle, big
boots-walking his way with a bag of burgers in one hand and a travel mug of
coffee in the other.
"Yeah," Jack said.
"Just admiring the ding in your fender here." A euphemism; the
"ding" was a deep dent. "Looks pretty fresh."
"It is. Best I can
figure it must've happened Monday night when the truck was stolen."
"Stolen? No kidding? By
who?"
The driver unlocked the door
to the cab, put the burgers and coffee inside, then shrugged.
"Damned if I
know." He rubbed his weather-beaten face. "Never happened to me
before. After she got the first part of her load Monday evening, I locked her
up and hit the hay. I got up the next morning and she was gone. Couple hours
after I reported her missing the cops found her in a liquor store parking lot.
I was so glad to get her back-I mean, you don't know what kind of shit was
gonna come down on me if she was gone for good-that I didn't notice the ding
till later."
"You report it to the
cops?"
"No. Why?"
"Because your rig might
have been involved in a hit and run."
His eyes narrowed. "You
a cop or something?"
"Nope. Just an
interested party." He saw the questioning look on the trucker's face.
"My dad's car took a wallop early Tuesday morning."
"He okay?"
"Luckily, yeah."
"Good." He hauled
himself into the cab. "Because I can't hang around for no investigation. I
ain't running or nothing, but I got a schedule to keep."
"I hear you," Jack
said.
He thought about stopping
him but decided against it. If his story was true-and Jack sensed it was-what
good would it do? If he hadn't reported his truck stolen, Jack could call
Hernandez and the Novaton cops would pick him up.
Of course, the reported
theft could have been a cover, but Jack doubted that.
As the cab door slammed
shut, Jack said, "What're you hauling?"
"Sand."
"Where to?"
"North Jersey."
Jersey? Jersey was loaded
with sand.
"What the hell
for?"
The driver shrugged. "I
don't set up the jobs or choose the loads; I just get it where it wants to
go."
Then Jack remembered Luke
saying something about Semelee sucking all the sand out of the cenote and
selling it. Could this be...?
"Where'd you get the
sand?"
Another shrug. "It got
boated in from somewheres in the swamp. That's all I know."
With that he threw the truck
into first and headed for the exit.
Jack watched him go. He made
a mental note of the company name. Wm. Blagden & Sons. He might look them
up when he got back north, maybe find out who'd hired them. Shipping sand from
a Florida nexus point to New Jersey...he couldn't imagine the reason, but it
couldn't be good.
He started back toward his
car. At least now he knew what had hit his father's Marquis. And he had a
pretty good idea who had been driving it.
But he still didn't know
why. Had a pretty good idea about that too, and hoped to nail that down this
afternoon.
8
By the time Jack reached Gateways South he'd stopped at a
local hardware store for a roll of duct tape, then called the Novaton Police
where he reached Anita Nesbitt. After a quick check she told him that, yes, on
Tuesday morning a dump truck had been reported stolen during the night and was
found shortly thereafter.
Okay. So Wm. Blagden &
Sons, Inc., was covered.
Jack parked in the
cul-de-sac and hurried into his father's place.
His father was watching TV.
Classic ESPN was running the 1980 Wimbledon slugfest between Borg and McEnroe.
McEnroe was screaming at himself for missing a bullet passing shot.
He looked up at Jack and
grinned. "Right about now I bet McEnroe wishes Borg had never been
Bjorn."
Normally Jack would have
groaned, but a bad pun was a good sign. His father loved puns. He was getting
back to normal.
He looked down at Jack's
muddy sneakers and still-wet jeans. "What happened to you?"
"Took a little boat
trip."
"You went boating? Why
didn't you tell me? I would have-"
"It wasn't exactly a
pleasure trip. Look, Dad, do you remember seeing a little black shell in your
hospital room?"
He frowned. "No. When
would this have been?"
"I found it the day
before you woke up. It was black, oblong, had a little hole drilled in the
hinge."
Please remember.Please...
Dad was shaking his head.
"Sorry. Never saw anything like that."
Jack suppressed a groan.
He'd have to try the hospital next.
Hospital...Jack remembered
the plastic bag of sundries that Anya had thrown together as his father was
signing himself out. He knew it wasn't in his car. Had he brought it in?
"Did you see a bag of
goodies from the hospital? You know, toothpaste, mouthwash-"
"Oh, that. I threw it
out."
"You didn't see a shell
in there?"
"I didn't really look.
I mean, I glanced inside but I don't use any of those brands so I tossed it
out."
Maybe...maybe...Jack didn't
want to get his hopes up.
"Where? In the
kitchen?"
"Well, yes, at first.
But this morning I tossed the kitchen bag into the can out back. Look, what's
so important-?"
Jack didn't wait for him to
finish. He dashed outside and around to the back porch. The green plastic
garbage can sat to the left on a small concrete slab. Just his luck, Friday
would be garbage pickup day and the shell-if it was in there-was on its way to
the county dump.
But no. The can was empty
except for one white plastic bag. Jack untied the top and poked around until he
found the bag from the hospital. He yanked it out and pawed through the
sample-size toiletries. He sent out a silent prayer to the patron saint of
garbage that he'd find the shell within, but it wasn't looking good...
And then he reached the
bottom and felt something hard and rough edged. He pulled it out-
"Yes!"
He had it. Now Carl could
come home. But first Jack had to arrange an exchange. He shook his head. A
shell for a human being...what kind of a deal was that?
What had Semelee told him to
do? Stand outside his father's house and announce that he'd found it. Riiiight.
But she'd said she'd hear him, and she probably could. Jack's Doubting Thomas
days were over. Anything goes.
"Okay," he said
aloud, feeling foolish but forcing himself to go on. "I've found the
shell. Did you catch that? I've found it. Tell me how we make the trade."
Now what? He supposed he'd
have to wait until Semelee got in touch with him.
Pocketing the shell, he
turned and found Dad staring at him through the back porch jalousies. He wore
the same perplexed expression as when Jack had unpacked those stuffed animals
from Abe. Maybe more perplexed this time.
Probably thinks I'm doing
drugs.
"Hi, Dad."
"Are you okay,
Jack?"
No, he thought. I'm not.
Someday I'd like to be, but at the moment...
"I'm fine."
His father pushed open the
porch door. "Come back in this way. It's shorter."
Jack took a step toward the
porch, then remembered again that it was Anya who'd packed up the bag. Had she
known...?
He glanced toward her place
and noticed a figure stretched out on a lounge in the front yard.
"Be with you in a
minute," he said. "I want to say hello to Anya."
As Jack crossed onto the
green grass, Oyv trotted up to meet him, wagging his tail in welcome. The dog
escorted him toward Anya, but Jack slowed, letting Oyv pull ahead as he noticed
that Anya was topless.
She lay face down on a towel
on the lounge cushion, dressed only in lime-colored Bermuda shorts, baking her
bare back in the afternoon sun. He was about to turn away when he noticed a
pattern of red marks on her exposed skin. He took a step closer and...
Jack bit his upper lip. They
looked like burn marks...and crisscrossing her skin between them were thin,
angry red lines, as if someone had been stubbing out cigarettes on her back and
then whipping her with a fine lash.
Jack wanted to turn away,
but couldn't. He had to stay and stare, horrified, yet fascinated.
Anya's voice startled him.
"A map of my
pain," she said without looking up. "See what he does to me?"
"Who?"
"You know. The
Adversary. The One."
Oh, yeah. The One...whose
True Name Jack wasn't supposed to know.
"But how? Why?"
"I've told you the why:
Because I hinder his path. As to the how...he has many ways, and they are all
written here, on my back."
"But how do those
burns, those cuts get there?"
"They simply appear.
They map his efforts to destroy me."
Jack shook his head to clear
it. "I'm not following.What is he doing to destroy you?"
"Help me with this
towel," she said. "Fold the ends over my back."
Jack did as she asked,
allowing her to wrap the towel around her upper torso as she rose to a sitting
position.
"Talk to me," Jack
said.
Anya shook her gray head.
"You have your own concerns. Those you should be worrying about. And
besides, what can you do to help? Nothing. This I must face on my own."
"Try me."
He liked this old lady. He
wanted to help her, do something to lighten her load.
"It's all right, Jack.
The sun makes it feel better. The rays don't heal me, but they lessen the
pain." She rose to her feet. "I'm going in to lie down."
"Are you okay?"
"I'm better than I was
this morning and I'll be even better by tonight."
"Will you be up for
drinks later? We'll do it at my father's place this time."
She shook her head.
"Not tonight. But tomorrow definitely."
Jack watched her and Oyv
enter the leafy interior of her house, then, feeling sad and angry and
helpless, he turned away.
9
Jack had lounged around with his father, dodging questions
about the toys and the shell until his father nodded off in his recliner. An
afternoon nap-one of the great pleasures in life. But Jack couldn't indulge
today. He had to wait for word from Semelee.
But that wasn't the only
matter on his afternoon schedule.
He stepped into his father's
bedroom and dialed Ramsey Weldon's office. He learned from the receptionist
that Mr. Weldon was on another line. Would he care to leave a message?
"No. When can I call
back?"
"Well, he'll probably
be leaving in a half hour or so."
Jack thanked her, hung up,
then went out to his car.
The duct tape he'd bought
earlier sat on the front seat in a flimsy white plastic bag emblazoned with the
Novaton Hardware logo. He snatched it up, bag and all. As he was closing the
door he spotted an envelope on the floor by the passenger seat. He picked it up
and checked the contents.
Carl's five hundred dollars.
He'd trusted Jack enough to
leave it in the car for safekeeping. He'd also trusted Jack to bring him back.
"I've got your damn
shell," Jack said aloud. "I'm ready to trade."
He glanced at his watch.
Couldn't wait around here any longer. He set off on a stroll toward the
administration building.
This time he could walk in
the open and say hello to passers-by instead of ducking into the bushes every
time someone approached. When he reached the parking lot, his heart gave a kick
when he didn't see Weldon's Crown Imperial, but eased back when he spotted a
'57 DeSoto in Weldon's space. This guy had some neat cars.
Jack strolled over to it. A
four-door Firedome with a glossy turquoise body, white roof and side panels,
big chrome bumpers, whitewall tires, and those fins-humongous wedge-shaped
projections, each fitted with a vertical row of three rocketlike red lights
that made the car look like a spaceship. Jack peered inside.
White-and-turquoise upholstery and a dash-mounted rearview mirror.
What was wrong with
Detroit-or Japan or Germany, for that matter? Why the hell didn't they make
cars like this anymore?
He hung around the DeSoto,
studying it from every angle for what seemed like forever before Weldon showed
up. He wore a pale beige silk suit today, so pale it was almost white.
"Another beauty, Mr.
Weldon," he said.
Weldon grinned. "Tom's
son, right? Jack?"
"You've got a good
memory."
"And you've got
excellent taste in cars. How's your father?"
"Doing great. He came
home yesterday."
Weldon's cheek twitched.
"Really? I had no idea. Why didn't anyone tell me?"
"I don't think anyone
else knows." Jack ran his fingers lightly along the DeSoto's right front
fender. "Say, would you mind giving me a little ride in this baby?"
Weldon shook his head.
"I'd love to, but I've got to get straight home."
Jack opened the door and
slipped into the passenger seat. "That's okay. Just drive me to the front
gate and I'll walk back. I need the exercise."
Weldon didn't look happy
about it, but Jack hadn't left him much choice.
The interior was like a
furnace. Jack cranked down his window as Weldon fired her up and backed out of
his space.
"Smooth ride,"
Jack said once they were rolling.
"Torsion-Air
suspension."
Jack watched him closely as
he asked the next question. "You ever hear of a woman named Semelee?"
Weldon's hands tightened on
the steering wheel, whitening the knuckles. His right cheek twitched as it had
before.
"No, can't say as I
have. Is she one of our residents?"
"Nope. Too young for
Gateways. Lives out in the Glades with a bunch of funny looking guys. She's got
this snow white hair. You'd remember her if you ever met her. Yousure you don't
know her?"
Weldon looked ready to jump
out of his skin and his forehead was beaded with sweat. It was hot in the car,
but not that hot.
"Quite sure," he
said.
"You're sure you're
sure?"
"Yes! How many times do
I have to tell you that?" He began to brake. "Well, here's the gate.
I hope you enjoyed-"
"Keep driving."
"I told you. I have
to-"
Jack pulled out the Glock
and held it in his lap, pointed in the general direction of Weldon's gut.
"You'll be in a world
of gut-shot hurt if this happens to go off. ThinkReservoir Dogs . So keep
driving. We haven't finished our chat. Smile and wave to the nice guard. That's
right. Now...let's head out to where my father had his accident."
"Where's that?"
Now Weldon was really sweating.
"You don't know?
Pemberton and South Road."
"But there's nothing
out there."
"I know."
"This is illegal, this
is carjacking, it's kidnapping, it's-"
"It's happening. Relax.
Don't fight it and we'll have a nice ride."
"If you want the car,
take it."
"I don't want the
car."
"Then...then why are
you doing this?"
Jack let him stew in his
juices for a while before responding.
"Just wanted to ask you
what you know about people who've been dying at Gateways South." Weldon
opened his mouth to reply but Jack held up a hand to stop him. "I don't
want to hear any bullshit about them being elderly and what can you expect. I'm
talking about three spouseless people in excellent health-your own doctor said
so-who've suffered death by mishap over the past nine months. At a rate of one
every three months. I'm sure you know their names: Adele Borger, Joseph Leo,
and Edward Neusner."
Weldon had turned pale. He
looked as if he might be getting sick.
"Of course I know their
names. Those were terrible tragedies."
"My father would have
made number four, and right on schedule. Know anything about that, Mr.
Weldon?"
"No, of course not. How
could I?"
That did it. Jack looked
around, saw no other cars in sight. This was as good a place as any.
He made Weldon pull over,
then he got out and made him slide to the passenger side-easy with the bench
seat.
"Now, put your hands
behind your back."
"W-w-what are you going
to do?"
"I'm g-g-gonna tape
your wrists together."
"No!"
Jack grabbed a handful of
Weldon's longish dark hair. "Look. We can do this the easy way-which is
you doing what I tell you-or the hard way, which means I have to shoot you in
the hip or through the thigh or something equally messy and bloody and keep on
doing that until you cooperate. Me, I don't like getting splattered with blood.
The stains are almost impossible to get out. So I prefer neat and easy to messy
and bloody. How about you?"
Weldon sobbed and put his
hands behind his back.
Jack duct taped his wrists
together, then his knees, then his ankles. That done, he took over the driver
seat and put the DeSoto back in motion. He pointed it toward town and kept
hammering at Weldon about the three dead folks, his father, and Semelee. Weldon
kept stonewalling him. Finally Jack pulled up before the locked gates to the
limestone quarry.
"So," he said.
"You don't know nuttin' 'bout nuttin', is that it?"
"Please. I don't.
Really. You've got to believe me."
Jack didn't.
"This is going to hurt
me almost as much as it hurts you."
With that he gunned the
DeSoto and rammed it against the gates. Weldon cried out as the chain snapped
and the gates flew back.
"The bumpers! The
chrome!"
Jack turned the car left
onto the steep grade of the narrow road that ran down into the pit. A rough
limestone wall loomed to his left. He didn't want to do it-he hated himself for
doing it-but forced his hands to turn the steering wheel and drag the left side
of the car against the stone.
"My God, no!"
Weldon cried.
"Sorry." And he
was.
As they reached the bottom
of the quarry Jack didn't quite make the turn, ramming the front end into an
outcropping of stone. The impact stopped the car short, hurling Weldon off the
seat and into the dashboard. Without a seat belt or his hands to protect him,
he hit hard, then flopped back against the seat.
"Whoa," Jack said.
"That must have hurt. But probably just a fraction of what my father felt
when that truck clocked his car out on South Road." He looked around.
"Let's see. We've remodeled the left side, let's see what we can do with
the right."
Between getting a taste of
what his dad had gone through that night and realizing what he was doing to
this beautiful, classic, innocent car, Jack was having trouble keeping his tone
light.
"No, please!"
Weldon screamed.
Jack accelerated and rammed
the right front end against another outcropping. Once again Weldon went flying
forward, this time hard enough to catch his chest on the dashboard and his head
against the windshield. He wound up on the floor instead of the seat.
Weldon was sobbing now.
"Okay, okay. I'll tell you about it, but you're not going to believe
it."
"Try me." Jack
threw the on-the-column automatic shift into neutral and set the emergency
brake. "You'd be amazed at what I can believe."
Weldon struggled back into
his seat. A blue-black goose egg was swelling under the hair that hung over on
his forehead. He held his back-tied hands toward Jack.
"Please?"
Jack pulled out his Spyderco
folder and slit the tape. He left the knife open and in hand.
"Don't get any ideas.
Now talk."
Weldon sagged back. His neck
bowed against the top of the backrest as he looked at the ceiling.
"It was just about this
time last year that the white-haired woman you mentioned, Semelee, called me
with this crazy story, a demand that Gateways make sacrifices to the
Everglades. Figuring this was some clumsy sort of local shakedown I asked her
what kind of sacrifices. She said...human."
He glanced at Jack. If he
was expecting to see shock or incredulity, he was disappointed. Jack had half
expected something like this.
"And you laughed her
off."
"Of course. Wouldn't
you? It was ridiculous. Or so I thought then. But she wouldn't quit. She kept
calling me, at the office, at home, on my cell phone, going on about how
Gateways South had encroached too near the 'lagoon'-I still don't know what
lagoon she was talking about-and that the Everglades was angry and demanded
sacrificial victims. Four a year. Ridiculous, right? But she kept after me,
saying that I, as head of Gateways, must make the offering. By that she meant,
choose the victim. All I had to do was point out a resident and the lagoon would
do the rest. If I didn't, the lagoon would choose one for me-from my own
family."
"And so you
caved."
"No. At least not yet.
As soon as she threatened my family, I went to the police. Since I had only a
voice on the phone, and couldn't tell them what she looked like or where she
lived, all they could do was keep an eye out for her and do regular patrols
past my house."
"And I take it that
didn't work."
Weldon shook his head.
"That same night, my son was bitten by a brown recluse spider and had to
be rushed to the hospital-he was only three and almost lost his arm. And right
there, in Kevin's hospital room, the woman calls me on my cell phone and says
this was just a warning. Had I changed my mind? I hung up but she called right
back and asked me if my daughter was afraid of snakes. And if not, she should
be." Weldon rubbed a hand over his face. "I've got to tell you, that
spooked me. I don't know how she knew about the spider bite, I don't know how
she got a brown recluse close enough to my son to bite him, but I was really
spooked."
Jack couldn't blame him. He
knew how he'd felt when Vicky had been threatened.
"Did you go back to the
cops?"
"What for? I couldn't
tell them any more then than before. So I took matters into my own hands. I
packed up my wife and both kids and sent them to stay with my in-laws in
Woodstock, right outside Atlanta. I figured putting them hundreds of miles away
in a different town, a different state, would keep them safe." He shook
his head. "The very first day there Laurie was bitten by a copperhead and
almost died. After spending a week up north, waiting for Laurie to be released
from the hospital, I finally returned home-alone, because I couldn't bear the
thought of bringing them back here until I'd dealt with this woman."
"Obviously you didn't
succeed."
"Not for lack of
trying. When I got home I found this young woman with white hair waiting in my
backyard. She was sitting with her back to me, holding her hands up to her
face, and in an instant I knew who she was. I grabbed the revolver I keep in
the top of our bedroom closet and went out to her. I was going to shoot her, so
help me, I was, but as soon as I raised the pistol I was attacked by a swarm of
bees and-"
"Killer bees?"
Weldon nodded. "Only
they didn't sting me enough to kill me. They concentrated on my face and my gun
hand and didn't let up until I'd dropped it. Then she turned and I saw her face
for the first time. I was surprised that she was so young. From her white hair
I'd assumed she'd be some old witch, but she was young and-"
"Not bad looking. I
know."
"You've met her then.
How did you-?"
"Let's stick to you.
What did you do then?"
"What could I do? She
told me I already had two strikes against me. I still remember her words:
'Strike three and your wife is out.' What else could I do? Tell me you would
have done any different."
"My approach to
settling problems differs a bit from the average."
"I don't know how, but
this woman somehow controls snakes, insects, birds, and who knows what else?
Don't you see the position I was in?"
Jack stared at Weldon. No
question, the guy had been thrust into an appalling situation: Finger a
relative stranger for death or lose a family member. A no-brainer, but also a
no-win.
"I see that a man has
to put his family before strangers, which is regrettably acceptable. But when
one of those strangers is my father, we have a problem." Jack jabbed the
knife blade at Weldon's face, stopping the point an inch from his nose.
"We have even more of a problem when it becomes clear that you took an awful
predicament and used it to turn a quick buck."
"I did no such
thing!"
Weldon cowered back,
pressing himself against the door as the knife point touched the tip of his
nose.
"Now's not the time for
lies, bozo." Jack was doing his best to check his flaring rage. "I
could go along with you doing what you had to if you'd picked out the sickest
Gateways folks, the ones with the shortest life expectancy. But you didn't do
that. Instead you picked ones who were not only the healthiest, but were
unattached, guaranteeing that their homes would go back on the market years,
maybe even a decade or two before their natural time."
"No!"
"Yes!" The word
hissed through Jack's teeth. "Yes, you son of a bitch! You fingered people
whose deaths would turn you a profit! And one of them was my father!"
Weldon's face crumpled. His
eyes squeezed shut and he began to sob.
"I'm sorry, I'm
sorry..."
"Three innocent people
are dead and my father was put in a coma, and that's all you can say?" He
wanted to drop the knife and throttle him. "Get out!"
Weldon looked at him.
"What?"
"Get out, you pathetic
bastard. Out before I cut you."
Weldon fumbled behind him
for the latch. As the door swung open, Jack raised his right leg and kicked
him. Hard.
"Out!"
Weldon fell out the door and
landed on his back in the limestone powder and rubble. Without bothering to
close the door, Jack threw the DeSoto into gear and hit the gas. He gunned the
car into a tire-spinning turn, then raced back toward where Weldon was
staggering to his feet. He let him scramble out of the way. Despite Jack's dark
urge to maim, maybe even kill the man, Weldon wasn't worth the hassle.
He tore up the steep roadway
out of the pit and onto the street. He knew Weldon wouldn't be going to the
police about this; he'd fear it would draw a loot of unwanted attention to the
deaths at Gateways. Let him find his own way home.
As he passed the trailer
park he pulled in. An impulse. He spotted Carl's junker parked by a mildewed
trailer. He got out and checked the door. Locked. He lifted the lid of a
garbage can by the steps and found take out containers-KFC, Chinese, Domino's.
He pulled out his wallet as he scoped the area. No one about so he slipped the
door latch with his MasterCard. Inside he closed the door behind him and looked
around. He wasn't sure why he was here. Just an urge to know a little more
about Carl.
The air conditioner was off
and the trailer smelled faintly of old food and sweat. The kitchen, bathroom,
and bedroom lay to the left, the main room to the right. He noticed the
disassembled remnants of Big Mouth Billy Bass, the singing fish, on the kitchen
counter, neatly stored in a little box. Jack was struck by how clean the place
was. Carl had said he loved his little trailer, and it showed.
In the main room sat a
good-size TV. It looked like at least a twenty-seven-incher-pan-o-ramic, one
might say. A battered Naugahyde recliner sat before it. The thick Direct TV
program guide for September lay open on the seat, marked up with a yellow pen.
Jack picked it up and saw that Carl had highlightedSurvivor ,Fear Factor ,Boot
Camp ,Big Brother ...secondhand living.
But that seemed good enough
for Carl.
Jack shrugged. Whatever gets
you through the night...
But nowhere in the trailer
was there a sign of who Carl was. No family pictures, no sign that he had a
past. Maybe his past wasn't anything he wanted to remember.
Jack stepped out, locked the
door, and drove back toward Gateways. He turned off the road and parked in the
trees next to the security fence. He noticed other tire tracks nearby. After
wiping down the steering wheel, gearshift, door and window handles, he stepped
up on the hood and went over the fence.
Easy. Too easy. Semelee's
clan could do the same with their pickup.
Semelee...As he walked back
to his father's house he ran the Semelee situation back and forth and sideways
through his head, looking for a solution.
He agreed with Weldon on one
point: Semelee seemed to be able to control the swamp creatures. How, Jack
didn't know, but he'd bet it had something to do with the nexus point at the
lagoon. She'd used that power to commit perfect murders-"sacrifices,"
as she'd put it to Weldon-in plain view without anyone suspecting that a human
agent lay behind the attacks. No question in Jack's mind that she was behind
the palmetto swarm and the alligator attack as well.
She had to be stopped, that
much was clear. He had no idea how, but he'd worry about that later. The first
thing he had to do was put Carl back in his trailer...his home.
10
"There you are," Dad said as Jack stepped
through the door. He'd obviously awakened from his nap. Looked like he'd
showered and shaved too. "Where have you been?"
"Here and there. Did
anyone call or come by while I was out?"
He shook his head. "No.
All quiet. You're expecting someone?"
Jack hid his frustration.
"Yeah. Sort of."
"Well, I need to do
some grocery shopping. How about driving me down to the Publix so I can stock
up?"
"How about I give you
the keys and stay here? In case that call comes, or someone shows up."
"Are you in some sort
of trouble, Jack? Because if you are, maybe I can help."
Jack laughed and hoped it
didn't sound as forced as it felt. "Trouble? No, not me. But someone I
know might be in a little."
"What kind?"
Jack knew he'd been acting
strange-at least in his father's eyes-but he wasn't used to all these
questions, or having his comings and goings noted and commented on.
This is why I live alone.
"You might say it's a
kind of family thing."
"Do those toys have
anything to do with it?"
"It might come down to
that."
Dad sighed and dropped into
his recliner. "You are the hardest person to talk to, Jack. You were a
great kid, but now you're a stranger. It's like you don't want to know me or me
to know you. You've got this wall around you. Is that my fault? Did I do
something...?"
This was painful. Jack could
see the hurt in his father's troubled eyes.
"Absolutely not. It's
me. It's just the way I am."
"But it's not the way
you were."
Jack shrugged. "People
change. You must know that."
"No. I don't. Most
people don't change. Kate didn't change. And Tom didn't-although it might not
be such a bad thing if he had. But you-you're a completely different
person."
Jack could only shrug again.
He wanted off this uncomfortable topic.
"Enough about me. How
about you, Dad? How are you getting on down here?"
His father gave him a long,
baffled stare, then shook his head.
"Me? I guess I'm doing
pretty well. I like the climate enough, but..."
"But?"
"I don't know.
Sometimes I think I made a mistake moving down here. Sometimes I wonder why I
ever left Jersey."
"I'd wondered the same
thing. So did Kate."
"I've never been the
impulsive sort, but this was an impulse. A Gateways South brochure came in the
mail one day and that was it. I took one look and had to be here. The graduated
care aspect and the idea of never being a burden appealed to me...appealed to
me so much it became an obsession that took hold and wouldn't let go. I
couldn't get it out of my head that this was the place for me. I sold the old
house and reinvested some of the money in this place and..." He spread his
hands. "Here I am."
"From what Anya told me
while you were in your coma, it sounds as if you've gotten into the swing of
things down here."
"I have. I've had to. I
had it in my head that Kate and Tom would jump at the chance to gather up the
grandkids and come down to Florida to visit. But only Kate did that. And only
once. Everyone's so busy these days. So I made a choice: I can sit before the
TV and ossify, or get up and about and do things while I still can. I figure
I'd rather be a moving target than a stationary one."
Target, Jack thought.
Helluva word choice, Dad. If you only knew...
Dad was shaking his head.
"But as nice as it is, I still can't believe I sold the family home and
left my kids and grandkids up north to move down here. I know not being a
burden was a big part of it, but really...what was I thinking?"
Something in the words sent
a chill through Jack. His father had done something he didn't quite
understand...developed a compulsion to move down here, to this particular
development, right outside the Everglades, close to the lagoon where Semelee
and her clan lived...
...close to a nexus point.
Hadn't Carl told him that
he'd developed a yearning-an "ache," as he put it-to get back to the
place where he'd been born, back to the lagoon...?
Back to that same nexus
point.
Coincidence?
He'd been told there'd be no
more coincidences in his life.
Was someone or something
moving pieces around the board-Jack's board?
But wait...Anya had said she'd
done part time work addressing brochures. Had she sent one to his father? Had
she influenced him to come down here? So she could-what?-protect him?
Jack's head spun. One thing
he knew was he wanted his father out of here, out of Gateways, out of the whole
damn state.
"Nothing says you can't
go back. In fact, I think you should. I'm sure Jersey's got a load of graduated
care places, if that's what you want."
Dad stood silent a moment,
then, "I don't know. I'd feel like an old fool."
"Which is more foolish:
admitting you made a mistake and rectifying it, or hanging around a place you
don't like?"
"When you put it that
way..." He shook his head. "I'll have to think about it." He
clapped his hands. "But no matter what I decide, we have to eat tonight.
I'll run out and get eggs and cheese and some ham. I make a mean omelet. How's
that sound for dinner?"
"Perfect."
With a pang of reluctance,
Jack gave him the keys to his rental. He had an urge to go with him, to not let
him out on his own unprotected, but Semelee had said he wasn't a target, and he
believed her. She'd had Jack at her mercy-outnumbered and outgunned-when she'd
said it, so she'd had no reason to lie.
11
As soon as he was alone, Jack pulled out the toys. He
inspected them for repaired seams, found one on each, and slit it open. He
removed the sundry weapons Abe had sent him and, armed with a screwdriver and
an adjustable wrench, hid them around the house.
Then he called Gia. She and
Vicky and the baby were doing fine.
"When are you coming
home, Jack?" Vicky asked. "I miss you."
"I miss you too, Vicks,
and I'll be home as soon as I can. As soon as I know my dad's okay."
He seemed okay now, but it
would take a little doing to make sure he stayed that way.
Still no word from the clan.
Jack stepped outside and looked around. The sun lay low over the Everglades,
brushing the fringe of the far-off hardwood hummock. He wondered if that was
the same hummock that housed the lagoon and his nexus point. If so, he might
see these mysterious lights tonight.
"I've got your damn
shell!" he shouted into the fading light. "Let's do this!"
Then he waited, not really
expecting anything, but hoping. After a moment of listening to frogs and
crickets, he turned to go back inside. He noticed a light on at Anya's. Maybe
she'd like to come over for dinner.
His knocks went unanswered,
even by Oyv, so Jack stepped around to the side window. There he saw her and
Oyv sleeping in front of the TV, in the same positions they'd been in Wednesday
night. Again, they looked dead. But he kept watching until he caught Anya
taking a breath.
He was halfway back to the
house when he saw his rental car pull into the parking area. He angled that way
and arrived in time to carry a couple of the grocery sacks.
"I picked up some
scallions," Dad said as they were unpacking. "I figured that would
add a little extra flavor."
"You've become a
regular Chef Boyardee."
"Had to learnsome
cooking. When you live alone, you can get awful tired of frozen dinners and
fast food. And it gives me something to do at night." He looked at Jack.
"Nights are always the hardest."
Jack wasn't sure what to
say. He wanted to tell him he was sorry about that but sensed his father wasn't
looking for pity. He'd merely been stating a fact.
So Jack ducked it.
"Hey, want me to slice those scallions?"
"Sure," Dad said
with a grin. "Think you can slice them nice and fine?"
He washed them off, then
handed Jack a slim knife and a cutting board. Jack positioned himself on the
other side of the counter and began slicing.
"Hey," Dad said.
"You're pretty handy with that blade."
"I'm a super sous
chef." He'd picked up a lot from helping Gia cook.
"While you're doing
that, I'll open this bottle of Chardonnay I've had in the fridge. Been saving
it for a special occasion."
"Omelets are a special
occasion?"
"Company is a special
occasion, especially when it's one of my sons."
Jack realized then with a
pang how lonely his father was.
"Can I ask you
something, Dad?"
"Sure." He'd
pulled a pale bottle from the refrigerator and was twisting a corkscrew into
its top. "Go ahead."
"Why didn't you ever
remarry?"
"Good question. Kate
always asked me that, always encouraged me to get into a new relationship.
But..." He grabbed two glasses and half filled them. "There's more
where this came from, by the way."
Jack got the feeling he was
trying to stall, or maybe even evade an answer. He wasn't going to let that
happen.
"You were saying about
not remarrying?"
He sighed. "Having your
mother taken away like that-one moment she's sitting next to me in the car,
next moment there's blood all over her and no one can save her. She's...gone.
You were there. You knew what it was like."
Jack nodded. His knife
picked up speed, slicing the scallions faster, harder, thinner.
Dad shook his head. "I
never got over it. Your mother was special, Jack. We were a team. We did
everything together. The bond was more than love, it was..." He shook his
head. "I don't know how to describe it. 'Soul mate' is such a hackneyed
term, but that pretty well describes what she was to me."
He pulled a carving knife
from a drawer and started dicing the thick slice of cured ham he'd bought.
"And let me tell you,
Jack, the grief over losing someone that close to you, it doesn't just go away,
you know. At least it didn't for me. Something like that happens and people
pepper you with all sorts of platitudes-it got to the point where I wanted to
punch out the next person who said, 'She's in a better place.' I almost
committed murder on that one. Then there was, 'At least you had her for a
little while.' I didn't want her for a little while. I wanted her
forever."
Jack was moved by the depth
of his feeling. This was a side his father kept hidden.
"If I can use an
equally hackneyed phrase: She wouldn't have wanted you to spend the rest of
your life alone."
"I haven't been
completely alone. I've allowed myself short-term relationships, and I've taken
comfort in them. But a long-term relationship...that would be like telling your
mother she can be replaced. And she can't."
Heavy going here. Jack
tossed off the rest of his wine and poured them both some more, all the while
trying to think of an adequate response.
His Dad saved him by
pointing the carving knife at Jack's chest.
"Your mother," he
said. "That's it, isn't it. I've always suspected that it made you a
little crazy, but now I want to hear it from you. I remember you at the wake
and the funeral. Like a zombie, hardly speaking to anyone. You were never a
momma's boy. Far from it. You were closest to Kate. But to see your mother
killed by violence, to have her bleeding and dying in your arms...there's no
shame in having a breakdown after what happened. No one should have to go
through that. No one."
Jack gulped more of his
wine. He could feel it hitting him. He'd had nothing to eat since breakfast and
the alcohol was jumping directly into his bloodstream. So what? And why not?
"I agree that no one
should have to go through that. But it wasn't Mom's death that put me on the
road."
"What then? It's driven
me crazy for the past fifteen years. What made you disappear?"
"Not her death. Another
death."
"Whose?"
"I was pissed at
everyone back then for not finding the guy who'd dropped that cinder block. The
state cops were going on about keeping an eye on the overpasses, but it takes a
lot of effort to track down someone who commits a random act of violence. And
they had better things to do-like ticketing speeders on the Turnpike. God forbid
we drive above the limit. And you, you weren't doing anything but talking about
what should happen to the murdering bastard when they caught him. Only it
wasn't a 'when,' it was an 'if'-an 'if' that was never going to happen."
Jack finished the glass and
poured himself some more, killing the bottle.
Dad looked up from the ham.
"What the hell was I supposed to do?"
"Something.
Anything."
"Like what? Go out and
track him down myself?"
"Why not?" Jack
said. "I did."
Oh, shit, he thought. Did I
just say that?
"Youwhat ?"
Jack raced through his
options here. Say never mind and stonewall it? Or go ahead and tell all. Abe
was the only other person on earth who knew.
But now the wine and a
cranky, don't-give-a-shit mood pushed him to let it roll. He sucked in a deep
breath.
Here goes.
"I tracked him down and
took care of him."
Jack thought he saw Dad's
hand tremble as he put down the carving knife. His expression was tight, his
eyes bright and wide behind his glasses.
"Just how...I'm not
sure I want to hear this but...just how did you take care of him?"
"I saw to it that he
never did anything like that again."
Dad closed his eyes.
"Tell me you broke his arms, or smashed his elbows."
Jack said nothing.
Dad opened his eyes and
stared at him. His voice dropped to a whisper. "Jack...Jack, you
didn't..."
Jack nodded.
Dad sidled left to one of
the counter stools and slumped on it. He cradled his head in his hands, staring
down at the pile of sliced scallions.
"Oh, my God." His
voice was a moan. "Oh, my God."
Here it comes, Jack thought.
The shock, the outrage, the revulsion, the moral repugnance. He wished now he
could take it back, but he couldn't, so...
He walked around the
counter, past his father's bent back, opened the refrigerator, and took out
another bottle of wine.
"How did you know it
was him?" Dad said. "I mean, how could you be sure?"
Without bothering to remove
the black lead foil, Jack wound the screw through it and into the cork.
"He told me. Name was
Ed, and he bragged about it."
"Ed...so, the shit had
a name."
Jack blinked. Other than
hell and damn, his father had always been scrupulous about four-letter words.
At least when Jack was a kid.
He lifted his head but
didn't look at Jack. "How?" He licked his lips. "How did you do
it?"
"Tied him up and
dangled him by his feet off the same overpass. Made him a human pińata for the
big trucks going by below."
The cork popped from the
bottle as Jack remembered seeing Ed swinging over the road, the meatythunk! as
the first truck hit him, then the second.
Music. Heavy metal.
Dad was finally looking at
him. "That's why you left, isn't it. Because you'd committed murder. You
should have stayed, Jack. You should have come to me. I would have helped you.
You didn't have to spend all those years dealing with that guilt alone."
"Guilt?" Jack
said, pouring more wine for both of them. "No guilt. What did I have to
feel guilty about? No guilt, no remorse. Send me back in time to relive that
night and I'd do the same thing."
"Then why on earth did
you just take off like that?"
Jack shrugged. "You
want an eloquent, thoughtful, soul-searching answer? I don't have one. It
seemed to make sense at the time. From that moment on the world looked
different, seemed like another place, and I didn't belong. Plus I was disgusted
with just about everything. I wanted out. So I got out. End of story."
"And this creep, this
Ed...why didn't you call the police?"
"That's not the way I
work."
Dad squinted at him.
"Work? What does that mean?"
Jack didn't want to go
there.
"Because they'd have
carted him off and then let him out on bail, and then let him plead down to a
malicious mischief charge."
"You're exaggerating.
He'd have done hard time."
"Hard time wouldn't cut
it. He needed killing."
"So you killed
him."
Jack nodded and sipped his
wine.
Dad started waving his arms.
"Jack, do you have any idea what could have happened to you? The chance
you took? What if somebody saw you? What if you'd been caught?"
Jack opened his mouth to
reply, but something in his father's words and tone stopped him. He was going
on about...he seemed more concerned about the possible consequences of the
killing rather than the killing itself. Where was the outrage, the middle-class
repugnance for deliberate murder?
"Dad? Tell me you wish
I hadn't killed him."
His father pressed a hand
over his eyes. Jack saw his lips tremble and thought he was going to sob.
Jack put a hand on his
shoulder. "I never should have told you."
Dad looked at him with wet
eyes. "Never? I wish you'd told me back then! I've spent the last fifteen
years thinking he was still out there, unnamed, unknown, some kind of wraith
I'd never get my hands on. You don't know how many nights I've lain awake and
imagined my hands around his throat, squeezing the life out of him."
Jack couldn't hide his
shock. "I thought you'd be horrified if you knew what I'd done."
"No, Jack. The real
horror was losing you all those years. Even if you'd been caught, you could
have pled temporary insanity or something like that and got off with a short
sentence. At least then I'd have known where you were and could have visited
you."
"Better for you,
maybe."
A jolt in the joint, even a
short one...unthinkable.
"I'm sorry. I'm not
thinking straight."
Jack still couldn't believe
it. "I killed a man and you're okay with that?"
"With killingthat man,
yes, I'm okay. I'm more than okay, I'm-" He threw his arms around Jack.
"I'm proud of you."
Whoa.
Jack wasn't into hugs, but
he did manage to give his dad a squeeze, all the while thinking, Proud?Proud?
Christ, how could I have read him so wrong?
Once again Anya's words from
that first day came back to him.
Trust me, kiddo, there's
more to your father than you ever dreamed.
They broke the clinch and
backed off a couple of feet.
Jack said, "If I'd have
known you felt that way, I might have asked you for help. I could have used
some. And you would have beendoing something instead of waiting for the police
to do it for you."
Dad looked offended.
"How do you know I wasn't doing something? How do you know I didn't take a
rifle and sit in the bushes, watching that overpass, waiting to see if someone
would try again."
Jack managed to suppress a
laugh but not a smile. "Dad, you don't own a rifle. Not even a
pistol."
"Maybe not now, but I
could have back then."
"Yeah, right."
They stood facing each
other, his father staring at him as if seeing a new person. Finally he thrust
out his hand. Jack shook it.
Dad looked around and said,
"I don't know about you, but I'm starving. Let's get going on these
omelets."
"You start the
eggs," Jack said, "and I'll finish dicing the ham."
A good night. A surprising,
shocking, revelatory night. Like nothing he could have anticipated.
He might have enjoyed it
even more if he'd managed to bring Carl home. He wondered how the poor guy was
doing.
12
Carl looked up at the starry sky, at the misshapen shadows
of the surround in trees, at the water in the lagoon, anywhere but at the
lights. Leastways he tried not to look. But as much as he wanted to stop it,
his gaze kept driftin back to the sinkhole...and the lights.
They'd set him here on the
ground, his back against one of the Indian hut support posts. They'd been ready
to tie his hands behind him when they remembered that he only had one, so they
lashed him to the post with coils of thick rope around his arms and body.
He'd overheard Semelee
mention that Jack had found her shell but how's it would have to wait till
tomorrow. Tonight was too important.
The air was warm and wet and
thick enough to choke a frog-maybe that was why they weren't peepin. Even the
crickets had shut up. The lagoon and its surroundins was quiet as a grave.
The lights had started
flashin a little after dark, strange colors and mixes of colors he never seen
nowheres else. That was when it really got crowded around the hole. But there'd
been lots goin on before that. Luke and Corley and Udall and Erik had been
settin up some sort of steel tripod over the mouth. It had a pulley danglin
from the top center where the three legs came together. They threaded a good,
long length of half-inch rope through it, then tied that to some sorta chair.
He kept telling himself,
Naw, she ain't really gonna do that. She ain't that crazy.
But come full dark, when the
crazy flashin colors was lightin up the trees and the water, sure enough,
Semelee put herself into the chair. She was danglin over the hole, with the
lights reflectin even stranger colors off that silver hair of hers, and then
Luke and a couple other guys Carl couldn't recognize cause their pan-o-ramic
backs was to him started lowerin her down into the hole.
After she disappeared he
could hear her voice echoin up from below.
"What're you stoppin
for? Keep me goin!"
Luke called out,
"You're deeper'n you should be already. How much to go till you hit the
water?"
"Can't see no water.
Looks like it all dried up."
"Then where's the
bottom?"
"Can't see no bottom,
just the lights."
"That's it," Luke
said. "I'm haulin you up now."
"Luke, you do that and
I ain't never gonna speak to you again! You hear that? Never! It's like nothin
I could ever dream down here. The lights...so bright...all around me...feels
like they're gointhrough me. This is so cool. You keep on lettin out that rope.
I want to see where they come from."
Carl wasn't sure of a whole
lotta things in life, but he was damn sure that was a real bad idea. He was
glad he was back here, away from the lights. He would've liked to be even
farther, like in his trailer watchin TV. He was missin all his Friday night
shows. But he couldn't worry about that now. He had to get outta here.
He'd been us in his hand,
workin at the knot behind his back, but this was one good knot. When you lived
out here in the wilds, specially on the water, you learned how to tie a good
knot. But that didn't keep him from tryin to loosen it up.
"Keep a-goin!" he
heard Semelee call up from the hole, her voice faint and all echoey like.
Luke shouted, "We're
almost outta rope!"
"Take me down to the
end! As much as you got!"
Good, Carl thought. They's
all concentrated on her.
If he could just get this
knot loose, he could sneak down to the water and steal a canoe and slip away
real quiet like. He could be long gone before anyone noticed. Then he'd-
He jumped at the sound of a
scream, a long tortured sound like someone havin their skin tore off-not just a
piece, but the whole thing.
Everbody around the hole
started shoutin and callin and movin this way and that. Four-five guys was
haulin on that rope as fast as they could. Finally they got to the end. Carl
caught a peek between the shufflin bodies and saw Semelee still in the chair.
But she was all slumped over like a piece of fish bait and not movin a muscle.
She looked dead.
Saturday
1
Semelee heard herself scream and woke up all sweaty and
thrashin.
Where am I?
"Semelee! Semelee, are
you okay?"
Luke's voice...and then his
face appeared, hoveringover her.
She sat up, recognized her
corner of theBull-ship , then flopped back.
"Here," Luke told
her. "Drink this."
He tipped a bottle over her
mouth and she gulped. Water. Lord, that tasted good.
She looked around again.
"How'd I get here? I don't remember going to bed. I-"
"You was down in the
lights," he said.
The lights! Of course.
She remembered now. She'd
been down in the hole, baskin in them strange weird lights like a sun
worshipper. But she hadn't felt strange. She'd felt welcome, more welcome than
she'd ever felt in her own home. She remembered wantin to tear off her clothes
so the rays could go straight to her skin. But she didn't get the chance...
Because that was when the
voices began.
Whispers at first, so soft
she could barely make them out. Not sounds, really. More like voices in her
head, like she was a mental case or somethin. She wasn't even sure they was
talkin to her. Maybe they was jawin at each other and their words was passin
through her head, but she had a feelin they was talkin to her. Shewanted them
to be talkin to her.
"What happened to you
down there?" Luke said. "You screamed like I ain't never heard nobody
scream, and when we pulled you up you was out cold. I thought you was a
goner."
Out cold...she jammed her
hands against her temples. Damn, she wished she could remember what had
happened, and remember more of what them voices had said. She did know she kept
hearin about 'the One.' All sorts of yammerin about the One, repeatin it over
and over again. The One what?
Suddenly she realized they
was talkin about a person. The One was preparing the way, everything depended
on the One because the One was special.
Wait, she thought,
stiffening as a thrill ran through her.I'm special. I got a power like no one
else. And then there's my name...
She levered up to a sittin
position and crossed her legs, Indian style. "Yes!"
"What is it?"
"Luke, do you know what
my name means?"
"Y'mean Semelee? It
means...it means 'Semelee.' Just like Luke means 'Luke.'"
"All names mean
somethin. I ain't got no idea what Luke means, but my momma told me that
Semelee means 'one and only.' She said she named me that because I was her
first and I was a real hard birth, and she wasn't goin through that again. She
said I was her first and last kid, her one and only."
Luke frowned. "Okay.
So?"
"I heard voices down in
that hole and they was talkin about 'the One.' That has to be me. They was
talking aboutme ." She closed her eyes. Excitement flashed like lectric
shocks through her body. "And they kept on sayin somethin else too."
What was it? It was right
there, just out of reach...started with anR ...but what was the rest?
And then she had it! The
name popped into her head like she'd known it all along.
A strange name. She'd never
heard nothin like it before. But then she'd never heard nothin like those
voices before neither. Was that strange word their name for her, their name for
the One? Had to be.
But who were the voices and
what did they mean about "preparing the way"? What was the
"everything" that depended on her, the One?
She had to find out. Maybe
she'd learn tonight. But she had to do a couple of things before then. One of
them was gettin her other eye-shell back. But first...
"I'm changin my name,
Luke."
He laughed. "That's
crazy! You can't just change your name anytime you feel like it."
"No. I got to. That's
why I was called back here. I thought the lagoon was talking to me when it said
it wanted sacrifices, but it wasn't. It was the lights-or at least the things
that live in the lights."
"Lay back down,
Semelee. You're talkin outta your head."
"No." She pushed
him away. "Don't you see? It was all to bring me here, to this place, at
this time-to teach me my True Name. And now that I know it, I'm gonna use
it." She rose to her feet and looked out at the lights still flickering up
from the hole into the early morning darkness. "Big changes comin, Luke,
and I'm gonna be part of them, I'm gonna be right at their heart. And if you
and the rest of the clan stick by me, we'll have our day. Oh, yes, Luke, we'll
have our day."
"Semelee-"
"Told you: I ain't
Semelee no more. From this moment on you call me-"
The name died on her lips.
She realized that she mustn't tell no one her True Name. It was only for her
and those closest to her. Luke was close, but not close enough. The man called
Jack, the special one...she could tell him maybe, but not right away. He'd have
to prove himself worthy first.
"Call you what?"
Luke said.
"Semelee."
Luke stared at her.
"Wasn't you just tellin me-?"
"Changed my mind. I'm
goin to change my name inside, but outside you can keep callin me Semelee."
She rubbed her stomach. "We got anything to eat round here?"
Luke straightened.
"I'll go check by the fire."
As soon as he was gone,
Semelee stepped out onto the deck and looked up at the stars wheelin above her.
"Rasalom," she
whispered, lovin the way it rolled off her tongue. That was her new name.
"Rasalom."
2
The man who was something more than a man opened his eyes
in the darkness.
His name...someone had
spoken his name. Not one of the many he used in the varied identities he
assumed for various purposes. No, this had been his True Name.
He'd been reveling in the
continued corporal mutilation of a teenage girl named Suzanne and the spiritual
ruination of the family that tortured her.
Poor Suzanne had been
chained to the other side of the wall of this Connecticut home for eleven days
now. She had been raped and defiled and tortured and mutilated beyond the point
of her endurance. Her mind had snapped. She had no more to give. She was dying.
Her brain had shut down all but the most basic functions. She barely felt the
corkscrew being wound into the flesh of her thigh.
But what was so delicious
here was the nature of the one twisting the corkscrew: an eight-year-old boy.
For it was not simply the pains of the tortured that nourished this man who was
something more than a man; the depravity and self-degradation of the torturers
were equally delicious.
He'd returned to this house
to bask in the dying embers of a young life's untimely end.
But now that was ruined, the
delicious glow fading, cooled by a growing anger and-he admitted it-concern.
Someone had spoken his True
Name.
But who? Only two beings in
this sphere knew that name: one was listening for it, and the other dared not
speak it. They-
There! There it was again!
Why? Was someone calling
him? No. This time he sensed that the speaker was not merely saying his True
Name, but trying to usurp it.
Rage bloomed in his brain
like a blood-red rose. This was intolerable!
Where was it coming from? He
rose to his feet and turned in a slow circle-once, twice-then stopped. The
source of the outrage...it came from there...to the south. He would find the
misbegotten pretender there.
All his plans were
progressing smoothly now. After all these centuries, millennia, epochs, he was
close, closer than he'd ever been. Less than two years from now-barring
interference from those who knew he was the One-his hour, his moment, his time
would be at hand.
But now this. Someone
usurping his True Name...
Never!
The man who was something
more than a man strode away from the house through the dissipating darkness. He
had no time to waste. He must head south immediately, trace his True Name to
the lips that were speaking it, and silence them.
He paused at the curb. But
what if that was just what someone wanted him to do?
This could be a trap, set by
the one man he feared in this sphere, the only man he must hide from until the
Time of Change.
Back in the days of his
first life, when he was closer to the source, he had enormous power; he could
move clouds, call down lightning. Even in his second life he could control
disease, make the dead walk. But here in this third life his powers were
attenuated. Yet he wasn't helpless. Oh, no. Far from that. And he could not
allow anyone to use his True Name.
He must proceed with
caution. But he must proceed. This could not go on.
3
Jack stepped into the front room and found his father
fiddling with the French press.
"Don't bother,
Dad," Jack told him. "I'll pick up some coffee and donuts in town."
He'd seen a Dunkin' Donuts
the other day and had awakened with a yen for some of their glazed crullers.
"Donuts? That sounds
good. But I don't mind making coffee. After all, the job has its perks."
Jack groaned. "What
kind do you like?"
"A couple of chocolate
glazed would be great."
Jack headed outside, trying
to concentrate on donuts in the hope that would help take his mind off Carl and
how he was going to bring him back. The air seemed less humid. Felt like a cool
front had come through.
About time. The relentless
heat day after day had been wearing him out. Maybe this was Elvis's doing. If
so, thank you, Big E.
A mist lay over the saw
grass sea stretching away to the distant hummock. The egret was back in the
pond, black legs shin deep in the water by the edge, waiting like a snowy
statue for breakfast to move and give itself away.
He headed around the side of
his house toward the car. He stopped when he rounded the corner. A woman was
seated on the hood of his car. She wore cutoffs and a green tank top. Her white
hair had been wound into a single braid. The companion to the shell Jack had
found hung at her throat.
Semelee.
"About time you showed
up," he said, moving toward her, wary, eyes scanning the surroundings. Had
she come alone? "I've been standing out here like some kind of nut
announcing to the air that I've found your shell. I thought you said you'd
know."
She smiled. "I did
know. That's why I'm here."
Jack couldn't pin it down
but she looked different. Her hair was just as white as ever, but her eyes held
a strange look, as if she'd peeked through someone's window and seen something
she wasn't supposed to know.
That was it. She looked like
she'd discovered some sort of secret no one else knew. Or thought she had.
"Took you long
enough."
Her smile remained. "I
had other things to do."
Jack tensed. "Like
what? You better not have hurt Carl."
"Carl's fine." She
held out her hand, palm up. "My shell, please."
Now it was Jack's turn to
smile. "You're kidding, right?"
"No. You give me the
shell and I'll send Carl back."
"Not likely."
The smile vanished.
"You don't trust me?"
"Tell you what: You
send Carl back, and I'll give you the shell."
"No way."
"What? You don't trust
me?"
Semelee glared at him.
"The One don't lie."
Jack stiffened. The One?
She'd just mentioned the One.
"What did you
say?"
"Nothin."
"You called yourself
the One. What did you mean by that?"
"Told you: nothing. Now
leave it be."
Anya had talked about the
One, but she'd indicated that Sal Roma was the One. Was he involved in what was
going down here?
"Do you know a guy
named Roma?"
She shook her head.
"Ain't never heard of him."
"Is he the one who got
you started on this sacrifice-to-the-swamp kick?"
Semelee's eyes widened. She
slid off the hood and stepped toward him. "How do you know about
that?"
"Not important. Just
tell me: Was it Roma?"
"Told you: Don't know
no Roma."
Jack believed her.
"Then who? Who gave you such a crazy idea?"
"Wasn't no 'who.' It
came from the lagoon its own self. If you listen, the lagoon'll talk to you.
Leastways, it talks to me. Told me in a dream that it was pissed off and that
Gateways had to pay. Said it would exact a price of four Gateways lives a year
and-"
"Wait-wait. That's what
it said? 'Exact'?"
That didn't sound like it
belonged in Semelee's vocabulary-at least not as a verb.
"Yeah. 'Exact.' Pretty
weird kind of talk, doncha think?"
Jack wondered if it had been
a dream at all. It sounded as if someone or something had been influencing her,
and he doubted very much it was her lagoon. Much more likely it was an
influence from that nexus point within the cenote.
He said, "You ever hear
of something called the Otherness?"
"Don't reckon I
have," she said, shaking her head. "Should I?"
"Never mind." Just
because she hadn't heard of the Otherness didn't mean she wasn't working for
it, knowingly or unknowingly. "But why Gateways people? There must be
other folks living even closer to your lagoon."
"There is, but the
lagoon wants Gateways folks. Don't ask me why, it just does."
Jack jerked a thumb over his
shoulder. "There's one Gateways folk in there it's not going to get. We
clear on that?"
She nodded.
"Absolutely. The lagoon's already done what it set out to do with the
sacrifices. There's still maybe a score to settle, but the sacrifice thing is
over."
"What score?"
"That's between me and
the lagoon, but don't you worry. Your daddy ain't a part of it."
Jack believed her this time,
and found relief in the fact that his father was no longer in the clan's
crosshairs. But that was tempered by the knowledge that he'd been replaced by
someone else.
"He'd better not be.
And I'd better see Carl pretty soon or I might just lose that shell. Or it
might slip out of my pocket as I'm crossing a street downtown. Wouldn't take
long for the traffic to reduce it to powder."
Semelee went pale beneath
her tan. "Don't even joke about that."
"What's so important
about that shell?"
Her hand went to the one
around her neck. "I've had em since I was a kid, is all. I just want it
back."
"And I want Carl
back."
She sighed. "Looks like
we'll have to put together a swap meet. Bring the shell to the lagoon
and-"
Jack shook his head.
"Uh-uh. Bring Carl here."
Jack watched Semelee's hands
open wide, then close into tight fists.
"You're makin this
awful hard." She looked up at the hazy sky, then back to him. "Guess
we'll have to meet somewheres in the middle. You got any ideas?"
Jack reviewed his trip with
Carl and remembered the dry stretch where they'd had to carry their canoe. He
mentioned it to Semelee and she knew where it was.
"Okay," she said.
"We'll meet there in an hour."
Jack looked out at the
Everglades and the clinging haze. Semelee seemed on the level but he didn't
know about the rest of the clan. And because of that, he wanted maximum
visibility.
"What say we make it noonish?"
he said.
"Why're you makin me
wait so long?"
"I need the time."
"All right. See you
then. And don't be late."
She turned and walked off.
Jack watched the sway of her hips as she moved away. He missed Gia.
He was still watching her,
wondering how she was going to get out of Gateways, when his father's voice
interrupted him.
"I hope you're not
really thinking of going through with this."
Jack turned to find Dad
standing on the porch, staring at him through the jalousies.
"You heard the whole
thing?"
"Just the end. Enough
to know that she's connected to what happened to me, and probably to the others
who've been killed. But what was that about Carl? Carl the gardener?"
"One and the
same."
Jack gave him a quick
overview of what had happened-about the trip to the lagoon, and Semelee and her
clan.
Dad was shaking his head.
"You've only just got here, Jack. How did you manage to get involved in
something like this in just a couple of days?"
"Lucky, I guess."
"I'm serious, Jack.
You've got to take this to the police and the Park Service."
"That's not the way I
do things."
"What's that supposed
to mean? This is the second time you've said something like that."
"It's plain and simple,
Dad: I promised Carl I'd get him back safely. Me. Not the cops, not the park
rangers. Me. So that's how it's going down."
"But you didn't know
the odds against you when you made that promise. He can't hold you to it."
"He's not," Jack
said. He shook his head. "You wouldn't understand."
Dad rubbed his jaw. "I
understand perfectly. And you know, Jack...the better I know you, the more I
like you. Carl's not holding you to your promise...you are. I can respect that.
It's damn foolish, but I have to respect that."
"Thanks."
How about that? Dad did
understand.
"But you can't go out
there alone. You're going to need backup."
"Tell me about it. Know
where I can find any?"
"You're looking at
him."
Jack laughed. Dad didn't.
"I'm not kidding, Jack."
"Dad, you're not cut
out for that."
"Don't be so
sure." He pushed open the porch door. "Come inside. I need to tell
you some things you don't know."
"About what?"
No matter what he was told,
Jack wasn't taking an accountant in his seventies as backup, especially if that
accountant in his seventies was his father.
"About me."
4
Inside, Dad handed him a cup of coffee, then, before Jack
could ask him what this was about, disappeared into his bedroom. He returned a
minute later carrying the gray metal lockbox Jack had found back on Tuesday. He
hadn't expected to see it again, but he was more surprised by what his father
was wearing.
"Dad, are you kidding
with that sweater?"
His father pulled the front
of the ancient brown mohair cardigan closer about him. "It's cold! The
thermometer outside my window says sixty-nine degrees."
Jack had to laugh. "The
Sasquatch look. It's you, Dad."
"Never mind the
sweater." He set the box on the coffee table. "Have a seat."
Jack sat across from him.
"What've you got there?" he said, already knowing the answer.
Dad unlocked the box and
flipped it open. He pulled out an old photo and passed it to Jack: Dad and six
other young guys in fatigues.
Jack pretended to study it,
as if seeing it for the first time.
"Hey. From your Army
days."
"Army?" His father
made a face. "Those clods? These are Marines, Jack. Semper fi and all
that."
Jack shrugged. "Army,
Marines, what's the diff?"
"You wouldn't say that
if you'd ever been in the Corps."
"Hey, you were all
fighting the same enemy, weren't you?"
"Yeah, but we fought
them better." He tapped the photo. "These were my wartime buddies."
His expression softened. "And I'm the only one left."
Jack looked at those young
faces. He pointed to the photo. "What are you all smiling about?"
"We'd just graduated
Corps-level scout-sniper school."
Jack looked up from the
photo. "You were a sniper?" He'd learned to believe in the
unbelievable, but this was asking too much. "My father was a sniper?"
"Don't say it like it's
a dirty word."
"I didn't. I'm
just...shocked."
"Lots of people look on
sniping with disdain, even in the military. And after that pair of psychos
killed all those folks in the DC area a while back, so does just about
everybody else. But those two weren't sniping. They were committing random
murder, and that's not what sniping is about. A sniper doesn't go out and shoot
anything that moves, he goes after specific targets,strategic targets."
"And you did that in
Korea."
Dad nodded slowly. "I
killed a lot of men over there, Jack. I'm sure there's plenty of soldiers
walking around today who've killed more of the enemy-Germans, Japs, North
Koreans, Chinese, Vietnamese-in their tours of duty than I did, but they were
just shooting at the faceless foreign bodies who were trying to kill them. We
snipers were different. We positioned ourselves in hiding and took out key
personnel. We could have a hundred, a thousand soldiers milling around just
five hundred yards away, but we weren't interested in the grunts. We were after
the officers, the NCOs, the radio men, anyone whose death would diminish the
enemy's ability to mount or sustain an attack."
Jack was watching his dad's
face. "Sounds almost...personal."
"It does. And that's
what makes people uncomfortable. They feel there's something cold-blooded about
picking out a specific individual in, say, a bivouac area, sighting down on
him, and pulling the trigger." He sighed. "And maybe they're
right."
"But if it saves
lives..."
"Still pretty
cold-blooded, though, don't you think. When I started out, if I couldn't nail
an officer or NCO, I'd go after radio men and howitzer crews. But I noticed
that whenever I took a guy out, another would pick up the radio or jump in and
start reloading the howitzer, and then I'd have to take them out as well."
Jack started nodding.
"So you began going after their equipment."
"Exactly. Know what a
.30 caliber hardball will do to a radio? Or to the sights on a howitzer?"
"I can imagine."
Jack had a very good idea of the damage it could do. "Good for the junk
pile and nothing else. You guys were using M1s back then, right?"
"Not us snipers. I was
trained on the M1903A1 with an eight-power Unertl scope, and that's what I
used. Made a couple of thousand-yard kills with that."
A thousand yards...three
thousand feet...killing someone more than half a mile away. Jack couldn't
imagine that. He tried to keep guns out of his fix-its whenever possible, but
when the need arose he had no qualms about using them. Usually it was up close
and personal, and never more than twenty-five feet.
A thousand yards...
"What kind of round
were you shooting?"
"I got hold of a cache
of Match M72s and I hoarded them."
Jack wasn't familiar with
the round. "How many grains?"
Dad's eyes narrowed.
"You shoot?"
Jack shrugged. "A
little. Mostly range stuff."
"Mostly?"
"Mostly." He
didn't want to get into that. "Grains?"
"One-seventy-five point
five."
Jack whistled.
"Yeah," Dad said,
nodding. "Penetrated eleven inches of oak. Nice little accuracy radius. I
loved that round."
"Don't think I'm
morbid, but...how many did you kill?"
Dad closed his eyes and
shook his head. "I don't know. I stopped counting at fifty."
Fifty-plus kills...jeez.
"I thought I was hot
stuff," Dad said, "really making a difference in the fighting, so I
kept count at first. But by the time I reached fifty or so it stopped
mattering. I just wanted to go home."
"How long were you
there?"
"Not terribly long-most
of the latter half of 1950. I was shipped into Pusan in August and what a major
screw-up that was, mainly because the Army units didn't do their job. Mid
September I was shipped to Inchon where I landed with the Fifth Regiment. By
the end of the month we'd fought through to Seoul, recaptured it, and handed it
back to the South Koreans. We thought that was it. We'd freed up the country,
kicked those NK commies back above the thirty-eighth parallel. Job done, time
to go home. But no."
Dad drew out that last word
in a way that reminded Jack of John Belushi. He rubbed a hand across his face
to hide a smile.
"No, MacArthur had the
bright idea of pushing into North Korea so we could reunite the country. And
there we found ourselves facing the Red Chinese. What a bunch of crazies they
were. No respect for life, their own or anyone else's, just hurling themselves
at us in human waves."
"Maybe what was facing
them at the rear if they didn't do as ordered was worse than charging you
guys."
"Maybe," Dad said
softly. "Maybe." He seemed to shiver inside his cardigan. "If
there's a colder place on Earth than the mountains of North Korea, I don't want
to know about it. It was chilly in October, but when November rolled
around...temperatures in the days would be in the thirties but at night it
would drop to minus-ten with a howling thirty-to forty-mile-an-hour wind. You
couldn't get warm. So damn cold the grease that lubricated your gun would
freeze up and you couldn't shoot. Fingers and toes and noses were falling off
left and right from frostbite." He looked up at Jack. "Maybe that's
the deep psychological reason I moved down here: so I'd never be cold
again."
Christ, it sounded like a
nightmare. Jack could see this talk was disturbing his father, but he needed
answers to a few more questions. He pointed to the medal case restingin the
bottom of the box.
"What's in there?"
Dad looked embarrassed.
"Nothing."
Jack reached in and snatched
up the case. "Then you won't mind if I open it." He did, and then
held up the two medals. "Where'd you get these?"
Dad sighed. "The same
time and place: November 28th, 1950, at the Chosin Reservoir, North Korea. The
Chinese commies were knocking the crap out of us. There seemed no end to the
men they were throwing our way. I had a good position when what looked like a
couple of companies of reds made a flanking move on the fifth. I'd brought lots
of ammo and I took out every officer I could spot. Anyone who made an arm
motion or looked like he was shouting an order went down. Every radio I spotted
took a hit. Pretty soon they were in complete disarray, all but bumping into
one another. It might have been funny if it had been warmer and if my whole
division wasn't being chopped to pieces. Still, they told me I saved a lot of
lives that day."
"By yourself...you
faced down a couple of Chinese companies by yourself?"
"I had a little help at
first from my spotter, but Jimmy took one in the head early on and then it was
just me."
Dad didn't seem to take all
that much pride in it, but Jack couldn't help being impressed. This
soft-spoken, slightly built man he'd known all his life, who he'd thought of as
the epitome of prosaic middle-classdom, had been a stone-cold military sniper.
"You were a hero."
"Not really."
Jack held up the Silver
Star. "This medal says different. You had to have been scared."
"Of course I was. I was
ready to wet my pants. I'd been good friends with Jimmy and he was lying dead
beside me. I was trapped. They weren't taking prisoners there, and if I
surrendered, God knows what they'd have done to me for killing their officers.
So I hungin and figured I'd take as many of them with me as I could." He
shrugged. "And you know, I wasn't that scared of dying, not if I could go
as quickly as Jimmy. I hadn't met your mother, I had no kids depending on me
for support. And at least I wouldn't be cold anymore. At that moment, dying did
not seem like the worst thing in the world."
Fates worse than
death...Jack understood that. But there was still the Purple Heart to be
explained. Jack held it up.
"And this one?"
Dad pointed to his lower
left abdomen. "Took a piece of shrapnel in the gut."
"You always told me
that scar was from appendicitis!"
"No. I told you that's
where I had my appendix taken out. And that's what they did. When they went in
after the shrapnel they discovered it had nicked my appendix, so they removed
it along with the metal fragments. Somehow they got me to Hungnam alive, put me
on penicillin for a week, and that was the war for me."
Jack looked at his father.
"Why'd you keep all this hidden? Or am I the only one who doesn't
know?"
"No, you're the only
one whodoes know."
"Why didn't you tell me
sooner, like when I was eight, or ten?"
As a kid it would have been
so cool to know he had a father who'd been a Marine sniper. And even as an
adult, he'd have had a whole different perspective on his Dad.
My father, the sniper...my
father, the war hero...yow.
Dad shrugged. "I don't
know. When I was finally sent home, I realized how many of my buddies weren't
going with me. Their families would never see them again. And then I got to
thinking about all the NKs and Red Chinese I'd killed who wouldn't be going
home totheir families, and it made me a little sick. No, make that alot sick.
And the worst of it was, beyond getting a lot of good men killed, we didn't
accomplish a goddamn thing by pushing north of the thirty-eighth. So I just put
it all behind me and tried not to think about it."
"But you kept the
medals."
"You want them? Keep
them. Or throw them away. I don't care. It was the photos I kept-I didn't want
to forget those guys. Somebody should remember them. The rest just happened to
come along for the ride."
Jack dropped the medals into
the little case and returned it to the strongbox.
"You keep them. They're
part of who you were."
"And you might say
they're part of who I still am. That's why I'll be backing you up when you go
out there to get Carl back."
"No way."
"Jack, you can't go out
there alone."
"I'll think of
something."
Dad sat silent a moment,
then said, "What if I can prove to you that I still have it? Please, Jack.
I want to do this with you."
His father was practically
begging Jack to take him along. But damn...it could turn ugly, and then what?
He'd never forgive himself if the old guy got hurt.
Still, he felt he owed him a
chance.
"Okay, Dad. You're
on-for a test run. How are we going to work this?"
His father's eyes were
bright behind his glasses. "I think I know a way."
5
The sign shoutedDON'S GUNS &AMMO in big red
letters-peeling red letters-withShooting Range below it in smaller black print.
"This must be the
place," Jack said as they pulled into the sandy lot on a rural road in
Hendry County.
Only one other car, an old
Mercedes diesel sedan, in sight. Probably the owner's. Opening time was
9:00A.M. and it was after ten now. Jack figured there probably would be lots
more activity once hunting season started, but at the moment he and Dad seemed
like the only customers.
They went inside. Behind the
counter they found a slim guy with salt-and-pepper hair and mustache. His lined
face made him look sixtyish, maybe even older.
"Are you Don?" Dad
said, extending his hand.
"That's me."
"We called about the
M1C."
They'd made a lot of calls
to a lot of gun shops-amazing how many there were in Florida-and not one of
them had a M1903A1. But this place said it had an old M1C. Close enough, Dad
had said. Hendry County was a good ways north of Gateways, but they'd had no
other options.
Don smiled as he lifted the
rifle leaning against the wall behind him and laid it on its side, bolt handle
up.
"One M1C Garand, coming
up. Heavy sucker. Gotta weigh a dozen pounds. But it's fully rigged-still has
the original scope and flash hider."
"I see that," Dad
said.
Jack was seeing a beat-up
piece of junk: The dried-out wooden stock was scratched and dinged and gouged,
the metal finish worn, and the whole thing looked like it had just received its
first dusting in years.
Dad picked up the rifle and
hefted it. In one seamless move he raised it to his shoulder and sighted down
the scope.
"Never liked the M82
scope. Never liked the way it was mounted, and only two-and-a-half power. The
Unertl I used was an eight." He looked at Jack. "This was the Army's
sniper rifle for a while. Couldn't hold a candle to the M1903A1, if you ask
me."
"If you really want to
shoot that thing," Don said, "I can sell you a much better
scope."
Dad shook his head. "I
qualified on this as well as the 1903. It'll have to do. But will it
shoot?"
Don shrugged. "Got me
there. I'd forgotten I had it until you called. That thing's been here so long,
I can't remember when I bought it or who from."
"What do you want for
it?"
Don pursed his lips.
"I'll let it go for twenty-five hundred."
"What?" Jack said.
Dad laughed. "Let it
go? That's way overpriced for Army surplus junk."
"A fully outfitted M1C
like this is a collector's item. If this baby was in better shape it'd go for
twice that at auction."
"Hey, Dad, you can get
a better rifle for a lot less."
"But not one I'm used
to."
"Yeah, but twenty-five
hundred bucks..."
"Hell, it's only
money." He looked at Don. "I tell you what: You can have your asking
price on the condition that it still fires. That means you've got to let me
clean it and fire a few test rounds. Do you have a bench where I can spruce it
up?"
Don pursed his lips again.
"Okay. I've got a cleaning set-up in the back you can use. Go ahead. But
give me a picture ID and your Social Security Number so I can background you
while you're doing that."
"Background?" Jack
said.
"Yeah. Instant
background check. It's the law. I've got to place a call to the FDLE to make
sure he hasn't got a criminal record, a domestic violence conviction, or under
a restraining order. If he comes through clean, he gets the rifle. If not, no
deal."
"Might as well quit
now, Dad," Jack said gravely. "You are so busted."
"Very funny." He
looked at Don. "No waiting period?"
He shook his head. "Not
for rifles, but there's a mandatory three-day 'cooling-off period' for
pistols."
Jack was glad he didn't have
to buy his guns through legal channels.
Dad fished out his wallet
and handed his Florida driver license to Don, saying, "What about ammo?
Have any match grade?"
Don nodded. "Got a box
of thirty-ought-six Federals. I'll throw in half a dozen rounds to let you
check it out."
Dad smiled. "You're
on."
6
"Jesus, Dad," Jack said as he stared through the
field glasses.
"Not bad for an old
fart, ay?"
Dad was down on his right
knee, left elbow resting on his left thigh, eye glued to his scope.
"Not bad? It's
fantastic!"
Earlier he'd watched with
amazement as his father's wrinkled old hands disassembled the M1C like it was a
tinker toy. He'd inspected the firing pin, wiped the scope lenses, cleaned and
oiled all the works, scoured the inside of the barrel with a long-handled
brush, then reassembled it with a precision and an efficiency that left Jack in
awe.
Dad had explained that it
was like riding a bike: Do it enough times and you never forget how. Your hands
know what to do.
Then it was time for the
test firing. Don had a two-hundred-yard rifle range behind his shop with acres
of open country beyond it. Dad's targets-large paper sheets with concentric
black circles at their centers-were set against a rickety wooden fence.
His first shots had been
grouped wide to the left, but as he made progressive adjustments on the sight,
the holes in the target crept inexorably toward the heart of the bull's-eye.
He'd punched the last three shots through a one-and-a-half-inch circle.
"Not so
fantastic," Dad said. "It's only two hundred yards." He patted
the stock. "Definitely worth the price."
"A hundred yards is all
we'll need, I hope. And by the way, I'm paying."
The Tyleski Visa had a
five-thousand-dollar credit limit. Still plenty of slack there.
"Like hell."
"No, the least a guy
can do for his backup is arm him." Jack extended his hand toward his
father. "You've still got it, Dad."
The flash of his father's
smile as they shook hands warmed him.
7
As Jack beached the motorized canoe on the bank of the
channel shallows, he got his sneakers soaked yet again. This was getting to be
a habit. The clouds had blown off and the sun was cooking his shoulders.
The shell lay nestled in the
right front pocket of his jeans. Now where was Semelee?
"You're late," she
said.
Jack looked right and saw
her rounding a bend on the far side of the shallows. She stood in the front of
a small, flat-bottomed boat and-
What the hell? She held a
shell over her left eye and had her hand clapped over her right. As Jack
watched, she lowered the shell and the hand and smiled at him.
Carl and Corley sat
amidships directly behind her; Luke operated the little outboard motor mounted
on the stern and glowered at Jack.
Carl grinned and waved the
oar protruding from his sleeve. Jack was relieved that he looked pretty much
the same as he'd left him.
"Sorry," Jack
said. "Had some things to do and everything down here seems to take longer
than it does up north. Ever notice that?"
"I wouldn't know,"
Semelee said. "I ain't never been up north."
Luke pulled up the motor;
the hull of the boat scraped the sandy bottom as he let it run aground in the
shallows. All four stepped out. Corley stayed by the boat while the other three
approached-Semelee and Luke first, Carl behind them.
Jack gave Corley a quick
look, noted a knife in his belt, but no gun. Same with Luke: a hunting knife
with a six-inch blade in a leather scabbard strapped to his belt, but again, no
gun. Good. Jack wanted to keep an eye on that knife, though.
They stopped in front of
him. Luke stood with his arms folded across his barrel chest.
"Well," he said
with a belligerent edge to his voice, "you can see plain and simple we got
Carl. Time for you to show us the shell."
Jack dug into his pocket,
all the while keeping an eye on Luke's hunting knife. If he made a move toward
it, Jack would go for the Glock.
He fished out the shell and
handed it to Semelee. As she took it and clutched it between her breasts,
Luke's right hand moved, not going for the knife but flicking toward Jack's
face. He heard a metallicclick and found himself face to face with a three-inch,
semi-serrated, tanto-style blade. Sunlight gleamed off the stainless steel
surface.
Jack cursed himself for not
guessing Luke might be palming a folder.
"Luke!" Semelee
cried. "What're you doin?"
"Taking care of
business."
"I've got the shell!
Put that away!"
Luke shook his head.
"Uh-uh. We're leavin with Carland the shell. None of this trade
shit."
Jack started creeping his
free hand around toward his back while they argued, taking his time, moving a
few millimeters at a time.
"Luke," Semelee
said, "we told him we'd trade and that's what we're gonna do."
Luke shook his head, never
taking his eyes off Jack. "I'm callin the shots here, Semelee. This is
man's work."
"You better put that
knife away, Luke," Semelee told him. "His daddy's over there in that
willow thicket with a rifle trained on us."
Jack stiffened. The little
stand of trees where he'd stationed his father was about a hundred and fifty
yards away. How did she know?
Luke's gaze snapped past
Jack's shoulder, then back. He grinned. "That old coot? What's he gonna
do?"
"Think about
that," Semelee said. "He's got a rifle and he's been watchin this
spot since before any of us arrived."
How did sheknow ?
"Yeah? So? He ain't
gonna hit nothin from that distance. But if he's watchin, maybe he'd like to
watch me cut his little boy's face."
As Luke drew back his arm
for a slash, Jack reached for his Glock and raised his free arm to block the
thrust, but didn't have to.
Everything seemed to happen
at once-red sprayed from Luke's head, something whizzed by Jack's ear, a
riflecracked from somewhere behind him, though not necessarily in that order.
Semelee screamed as Luke
staggered back, spun, and crashed face first into the water. A bright red stain
began to drift away from him in the barely existent current.
Jack drew the Glock and
turned to stare at the thicket.
Jesus, Dad! You didn't have
to go for a kill shot.
This was going to make for
big trouble-police, coroner's inquests, the whole legal ball of wax-shit!
"Luke! Luke!"
Corley cried as he splashed toward him.
Jack kept the Glock trained
on him; to his left, Semelee hadn't moved; she stood with her hands pressed
against her mouth. Carl was in a squat, looking around like a cat who'd just
heard thunder for the first time.
And then, miraculously, Luke
jerked his face out of the water and coughed. He shook his head and sat up.
Blood still streamed down his forehead, but Jack could see now that it was from
a front-to-back furrow along the center of his scalp.
Jack had to laugh. Dad, you
pisser! Youpisser!
"He only parted your
hair, big boy," Jack said. "Next time, he parts your tiny
brain." He waved his pistol at Corley. "Get him back to the
boat." Jack motioned Carl toward the canoe. "Welcome back, Carl. Get
that thing turned around and ready to go."
Carl grinned. "You got
it."
"Wait," Semelee
said as Jack turned to go.
"Sorry. Gotta go. We're
finished with this bullshit."
"No." She reached
out and touched his arm. Gently. "I need to talk to you."
"Sorry."
"Please?"
8
Jack waited. Semelee looked around as if checking to make
sure Luke was out of earshot.
She lowered her voice.
"You gotta believe I didn't know Luke was gonna pull somethin like
that."
Jack looked into her eyes
and did believe. "Okay. But that wouldn't have made much difference if I
was the one bleeding now instead of your pal there."
"Please don't be mad at
me."
The plaintive note in her
voice, the fawn like look in her huge dark eyes...Jack couldn't fathom what she
was up to.
"Lady, you've got to be
kidding." He went to jab a finger at her and realized he still had the
Glock in his hand. So he pointed with his left. "This is all your doing.
We're all here because of you. You kidnapped Carl. You're behind the deaths of
three innocent folks, and it was only by luck that my dad didn't wind up the
fourth."
"You gonna tell the
cops?"
"Maybe."
A slow smile stretched her
lips. "No, you ain't. I can tell."
Well, she had that right.
Jack couldn't see any point of bringing cops into the picture. The Dade County
DA was going to charge Semelee with what? Murder by coral snake? Murder by
bird? Yeah, right.
"You can't blame
me," she said. "Don't you see? It wasn't really me. It was all part
of the plan."
"Plan?" Jack felt
the weight of the pistol in his hand. I should put one in her right now, he
thought. Who knew how many lives he'd save if she never got back to her lagoon.
"Well, you'd better come up with another plan, because I'm declaring this
one over, done,finis ."
"Ain't my plan."
That caught Jack off guard.
"Then whose?"
"The lights'."
Oh, boy, Jack thought. Here
we go.
"You mean the
lights-the ones that supposedly come out of your sinkhole-are behind all
this?"
She beamed. "Yeah. I
didn't see it before, but then I got the big picture. It's all been part of a
plan, one big, beautiful plan."
"Okay. The lights have
a plan." The lights...if they were connected to the nexus point, then,
according to Anya, they were connected to the Otherness. "Tell me about
it."
Her smile widened.
"Can't tell you all of it, but I can tell you some. I can tell you that
the lights drew me back here so's I could find out who I was."
"Really. And who would
that be?"
"Oh, I can't tell you
that. Leastways not yet. Only someone real close to me can know that."
"Well, I'm only a foot
or two away."
"Notthat kind of close.
The other kind of close...the way you're gonna be with me real soon."
Oooooh, lady, I wouldn't
count on that, Jack thought.
"Really."
"Yeah. Which brings me
to another part of the big picture: the sacrifices. They was done for a
purpose."
"Like what?"
"To get you down
here."
Jack's mouth went dry. All
along he'd had a niggling suspicion, a creeping fear that his father hadn't
been a random victim; but having it laid out before him like this was
unnerving.
I'm responsible.
But he saw a problem.
He licked his lips.
"Wait. That doesn't make sense. You say your lights figured if they killed
my father I'd come down here. But I mightnot have come. My brother might have
come instead. And why the other three deaths before him?"
Semelee shrugged. "Who
can explain how the lights think? Maybe they liked the sacrifices, maybe they
knew Mr. Weldon would get to your daddy sooner or later and so they just let
things happen. Maybe your daddy's name came up when only you could come. Don't
much matter none. You're here, ain't you."
Yeah, he thought. I'm here
all right.
"Why would your lights
want me here?"
Semelee smiled. "For
me."
"For you? What do you
want with me? What do you even know about me?"
"I know you're special.
And I know we was meant to be together."
"Yeah? Well, sorry. You
and your lights are a little late. I'm taken."
"Don't matter. It's
gonna be you and me. Can't stop it. It's like...like..."
"Kismet?"
"Kiss what?"
"Destiny?"
"Yeah, that's it.
Destiny. You and me's destined to be together. You're gonna bring me in, take
me back with you, make me belong, and then together we're gonna rule the
roost."
Make you belong? he thought.
Boy, sister, have you picked the wrong guy. "Listen, if you're an
outsider, the last guy you want to hook up with is me."
"Lemme be the judge of
that." She stepped closer until her lips were barely an inch from his.
"I'll meet you tonight at-"
"Sorry," Jack
said, backing away. "Game over. Hangout with your lights and your buddies
here, do whatever floats your boat, but stay away from Gateways, especially
from my father." He raised the Glock and held it beside his head, muzzle
skyward. "I see you or any of your clan within a hundred yards of my
father, you're dead. Not figuratively dead, not virtually dead, not merely
dead, but clearly and sincerely dead. Got it?"
She stared at him with her
big, suddenly sad eyes. Her lower lip trembled.
"No...you
can't..."
"Got it?"
Jack turned and sloshed over
toward where Carl waited with the boat in the deeper water.
"You can't!"she
screamed behind him.
Watch me.
9
"He needs killin, Semelee," Luke said. "He
needs killin real bad."
They had the deck of
theHorse-ship all to theirselfs. Semelee sat with her legs danglin over the
side, starin at her reflection in the water. Luke crouched next to her.
His head had stopped
bleedin. Finally. For a while there she'd thought he was gonna lose every drop
of blood in his body. He'd refused to go to the hospital, sayin he'd heal up
just fine without no damn fool doctors stickin him with needles. Maybe he was
right, but he sure looked stupid with that red bandanna tied across his head
and under his chin.
"You're right,"
Semelee told him. "For once, I ain't got no argument with you."
Luke stared at her with
shocked eyes. "You mean it?"
"Damn right I do."
"But I thought you was
sweet on him."
"Wasn't never sweet on
him. I thought he was special but that don't matter none now. He hurt you
and-"
"His daddy did the
shootin."
"I know that. But his
daddy only pulled the trigger. It was him, it was Jack who put him up to it.
Probably told his daddy to blow your head off but the old boy only creased you.
Can't have that, Luke. Can't have nobody, no matter how special they are, hurt
in someone in the clan."
"So then it's okay with
you if I take Corley and a couple-"
Semelee shook her head.
"Uh-uh. I'm gonna handle this my own self. For you, Luke. It'll be a
present from me to you."
The shock in Luke's eyes
melted into something like love.
Don't be gettin no ideas,
she thought.
Because this had nothin to
do with Luke. She was just lettin him think that. He'd been too far away and
too busy with his bleedin head to pay any attention to what had gone on between
her and Jack in the shallows. Didn't hurt none though to let him think he was
the reason she was gonna go after Jack.
But this was gonna be all
for her.
She'd wanted to cry all the
way back from the shallows. Her heart still felt like it'd been tore right out
of her chest. He'd turned her down, turned his back and walked away. He said it
was because he was taken, but that was a lie. Semelee had seen it all through
her life and she knew the real truth: Jack thought he was too good for her.
But as she'd returned to the
lagoon she realized it was the other way around.
Jack...how could she've
thought he was special and meant for her? What was she thinking? He obviously
wasn't so special and definitely not for her. She saw that now. Her visit to
the lights in the sinkhole had changed everything. She knew her True Name now,
knew that she'd been brought here for a purpose. She wasn't sure what that was
yet, but she would. She just knew she would.
She'd been special
before-her powers proved that-but now she was even more special. Much too
special for Jack.
Yeah, but if that was true,
why was she still hurt in? Why this cold hard lump where her stomach used to
be?
She knew of only one way to
make it better.
"Leave me be for
now," she told Luke. "I gotta work on this. I'm gonna fix a big fat
surprise for our friend Jack."
He got up and backed away.
"Okay, Semelee. Sure. Sure. Maybe I'll go check on Devil. See how he's
doin."
Despite how bad she was
feeling, Semelee had to smile. Luke'd always been sorta like her puppy dog, but
now he was actin like her slave.
But she was okay with that.
Every girl should have a slave.
10
"I think this calls for a drink," Dad said as
they stepped into the house.
They'd dropped Carl-with his
thousand dollars-off at the trailer park. All the way home he'd been so
effusive in his thanks for rescuing him from the clan and the lights that Jack
had had to shut him up by getting him to describe what he'd seen last night.
He'd found Carl's description of Semelee being lowered into the hole particularly
unsettling. If the lights, filtered through sand and water, had caused the
clan's deformities, what would direct exposure do? Make you crazy? The cenote
must have been where she'd learned-how had she put it?Who I am . Who was she if
not Semelee?
"That was one hell of a
shot, Dad. Onehell of a shot."
Jack kept reliving the
emotional swings of that moment.
"Wasn't it? Wasn't it,
though?"
Dad had darted into the
kitchen and was searching through the bottles in a cabinet above the sink. His
speech came in staccato bursts, his movements were quick, jittery, as if he'd
mainlined caffeine.
He's higher than the
proverbial kite, Jack thought.
"I wasn't looking to
kill him, you know, and prayed I wouldn't, but I was also thinking, if it's his
life or Jack's, then I can live just fine with a kill shot. All the skills came
back as I was sitting in that tree, Jack. Suddenly I was back at the Chosin
Reservoir, and I was on autopilot and really, really relaxed because no one was
shooting at me out in the Glades. It was just me and the rifle, and control of
the situation was mine for the taking. I-here it is." He pulled a dark
green bottle from the cabinet and held it aloft. "Wait till you taste
this."
"Scotch? I think I'll
go for a beer."
"No-no. You've got to
try this. Remember Uncle Stu?"
Jack nodded.
"Sure."
Uncle Stu wasn't a real
uncle, just a close friend of the family. Close enough to earn
"Uncle" status.
"He belongs to a single
malt scotch club. He let me try this once and I had to get a bottle. Aged in
old sherry casks-amontillado, I believe."
"And discovered with a
skeleton behind a brick wall?" When Dad gave him a questioning look, Jack
said, "Never mind."
"You drink this
neat." Dad poured two fingers' worth into a couple of short tumblers.
"Adding ice, water, or soda is punishable by death." He handed Jack a
glass and clinked his own against it. "To the best day of my life in the
last fifteen years."
Jack was pierced by an
instant of sadness. The best? Really?
Not a Scotch drinker, Jack
took a tentative sip and rolled it around on his tongue. It had a sweetness and
a body he'd never tasted in any other Scotch. And the finish was...fabulous.
"For the love of God,
Montresor!" he said. "That isgood!"
"Isn't it?" Dad
said, grinning. "Isn't that the best you ever had?"
"No question. Potent
stuff."
"That's what I hear,
but I haven't seen any proof."
Jack let that one slide.
"Where can I get a bottle?"
"You can't. It's all
gone. They produce only so many casks and this batch is long sold out."
Jack lifted his glass for
another sip. "Then we'd better nurse this one."
"I don't care if we
empty the bottle. This is a special day. It's been a long, long time since I've
felt this alive." He looked at Jack. "But I have to ask you
something."
"Shoot."
"Where'd that pistol
come from, the one you pulled after I parted the big guy's hair?"
Jack felt very close to his
father at the moment, closer than he could ever remember. The father-son slope
had been leveled. They were eye to eye now. Equals. Friends. He didn't want
anything to get in the way of that, but he couldn't very well tell Dad he'd
imagined the Glock.
So he pulled it from the
small of his back and laid it on the kitchen counter.
"You mean this?"
"Yes. That." His
father picked it up and hefted it. Jack noted with approval how he kept the
muzzle directed down and away from both of them. "What's it made of? Feels
almost like..."
"Plastic? That's
because most of it is. Not the barrel and firing pin, of course, but pretty
much all the rest."
He turned it back and forth
in his hand, staring at it. "Amazing." He raised his eyes to Jack.
"But what's an appliance repairman doing with something like this?"
How to handle this...
"Sometimes I wind up in
bad neighborhoods and I feel more comfortable knowing I'm carrying."
"But how did you get it
down here? I know you didn't carry it aboard the plane."
Jack shrugged. "There
are ways."
Dad continued to stare at
him. "Tell me the truth: You're not really a repairman, are you."
"Oh, but I am. That's
the truth."
"Okay, but what else
are you?" He waggled the Glock. "I saw how you handled this out
there. I saw plenty of people handle guns in the war, and you could always tell
the ones who knew what they were doing and were comfortable with them, just as
you could tell the ones who weren't. You fall into the first category,
Jack."
Despite the closeness he
felt to his father at this moment, despite the combat-zone bond they'd formed,
Jack couldn't bring himself to tell him.
"You're pretty
comfortable too, Dad. Maybe it just runs in the family."
"All right. Keep your
secrets. For now. But promise me that someday, before I die, you'll tell me.
Promise?"
Jack knew a trap when he
heard one. This one was a cousin of "When did you stop beating your
wife?" If he promised, he'd be admitting there was something to tell.
"Let's not talk about
you dying, Dad."
He sighed. "I'm not
going to get anywhere, am I?" He poured more Scotch into Jack's glass.
"Maybe this will loosen your tongue."
Jack laughed. "No one's
ever tried to ply me with liquor before. Bring it on!"
11
The shadows was gettin long by the time Semelee was ready
to make her move. Even us in both eye-shells, it had took her a while to get
Dora in place. Like any other alligator snapper, she was slow and kinda clumsy.
Nothin like Devil.
Poor Devil. Luke said he was
doin right poorly and looked like he was fixin to die. That made her feel bad.
But she shook off the
sadness and fixed on what she aimed to do. Now that she finally had Dora where
she wanted her, Semelee was ready for the next step.
She moved away from the
lagoon and walked through the hummock until she came to the bees' nest. She
didn't get too close. These was killer bees and once they got mad they'd swarm
and wouldn't stop stingin. They didn't know how.
She fixed the shells over
her eyes and concentrated......and sees the inside of the hive. Her vision's
all weird, like she's lookin through dozens of eyes at once...
Semelee lowered the shells
and picked up the rock she'd brought along. She tossed it at the hive, then put
the shells back over her eyes, real quick like.
...and once again she's
inside the hive with that weird way of looking at things. But the hive's
different now. It's filled with angry buzzing-real angry. They're movin toward
the opening, hittin the air and the sunlight, and then she's flyin, movin right
with them.
She sees herself, standin in
the shadows with the shells over her eyes. The swarm homes in on her like she's
the absolute worst thing in their world, like they gotta protect the hive from
her or die tryin. Sweat breaks out all over her body. Maybe she shouldn't have
done this. Maybe she should have thought of another way. Cause if she can't
turn them, they're gonna kill her.
She pulls at them, pushes at
them, there's somethin worse than her, somethin that's a bigger threat to the
hive and they've gotta get him, gotta stop him or the hive'll be destroyed.
It doesn't seem to be
working. They're still comin at her. Somethin inside her is screamin to run but
she knows that won't do no good. Ain't nobody gonna outrun these bees.
Gotta turn em, gotta turn
em, gotta-
There! They're turnin,
veerin away from her and turnin east. She did it. She's in control now and her
own rage adds fuel to the bees'.
12
With his father noisily engaged in an exploration of the
deep, dark recesses of napland, Jack wandered outside. Square-foot-wise, Dad's
place was bigger than Jack's apartment back in New York, but it felt smaller.
Maybe because he didn't have to share his place with anyone. He needed some
fresh air.
With the comforting weight
of the Glock at the small of his back, he scanned his surroundings as he yawned
and stretched, looking for signs of the clan. Semelee had said Dad was no
longer a target, but she'd been acting pretty weird out there in the Glades.
What was to prevent her from changing her mind?
He started to circle the
house, as much inspecting as trying to walk off the Scotch. He hadn't had all
that much but it had made him a little drowsy. Not drowsy enough for a nap,
though.
No white-haired girl sitting
on his car hood this time. No one at all in sight. As he walked around to the
left side he heard a faint buzzing, like a far-off chainsaw, filtering through
the air. He looked around for the source but saw nothing. Maybe someone was
using one on the far side of one of the houses. One thing he knew, it wasn't
Carl. He was taking the rest of the day off-although he'd told Jack he'd return
briefly tonight to set up the Anya-cam again.
The buzzing grew louder and
Jack did another slow turn. What-?
Then he saw the man-size
cloud sweeping toward him from the Glades and knew with a sick, cold dread what
it was and who had sent them. All his instincts urged him to turn and run but
he forced himself forward, toward them. Because that was where the front door
was. He sprinted with everything he had, but the bees got there first.
He staggered back as they
swarmed over him and began stinging. Their angry buzzing and pain like dozens
of red-hot ice picks stabbing into his flesh became Jack's world. He needed
both hands to bat the bees away from his face but that left the rest of him
vulnerable-his neck, his scalp, his bare arms. He could feel them stinging him
through his T-shirt. He tried for the door again but they drove him back.
Through the cloud he caught
a glint of water-the pond. He stumbled in that direction, picking up speed.
When he reached the bank he leaped blindly in a headlong dive. As he knifed
through the surface he felt most of the swarm back off-but not all. Some still
clung to him, stinging as he-
His outstretched hands hit
the rough, hard surface of an underwater rock. He clung to it to keep himself
submerged. He was safe for the moment, but he was going to need air soon. Very-
The rock moved, twisting
under him. Through the murky water he saw that it had scalloped edges and a
tail and he didn't need to see the two big heads rearing up, hooked jaws agape,
to know what was sharing the pond with him.
He clung to the edges of the
shell as the big alligator snapper surged toward the surface, twisting this way
and that as it tried to shake him off. The ridged surface was slimy and his
fingers were losing their grip. Jack was running out of air as he raced through
his options. The pond was clearly a no-win. Had to get out and take his chances
with the bees. With the snapper surfacing, he was going to have to deal with
them anyway.
As his lungs screamed for
air, he drew his legs up under him, folding them till his sneaker soles were on
the shell. As soon as his head broke water, the bees were on him again. He kept
his face submerged until the last possible instant, then sprang off the shell,
leaping for land. His right sneaker slipped, robbing him of the distance he
needed, and the breath he'd taken while airborne was knocked out of him when he
belly flopped onto the edge of the bank. His legs were still in the water and,
for a panicky instant as he heard the splash of the snapper coming for him, he
remembered what those jaws could do to a broomstick. A flashing vision of
himself crawling the rest of the way out of the water with a bloody stump where
a foot used to be threw him into a twisting roll that left him clear of the
water. As he batted at the relentless bee swarm, he glimpsed the two heads
stretched to the limits of their thick necks snapping at empty air where his
legs had been.
Could an alligator snapper
move on land? Jack wasn't waiting around to find out, especially with the bees
stinging him again. He realized he'd emerged on Anya's side of the pond, so he
scrambled to his feet and raced toward her front door. It was closed but maybe
it was unlocked.
Please be unlocked!
But he didn't need the
shelter of her house. As soon as he crossed into her circle of green lawn, the
killer bees peeled off him the same way the palmettos had the other night when
he'd jumped through his father's door.
He heard their enraged buzzing
rise in pitch and volume as they hurled themselves at him, only to be turned
back as soon as they crossed the line into Anya's space.
"Go!" he heard a
voice cry behind him.
Jack turned and saw Anya
crossing the lawn in his direction. She was waving both arms in a shooing
motion.
"Go!" she shouted
again. "Back where you came from!" She pointed to the snapper's two
heads, watching from the pond. "You too! Go!"
The bees swarmed in random
confusion, then gathered into an oblong cloud and buzzed away. When Jack looked
at the pond again, the snapper was gone.
He dropped to his knees,
panting. His skin felt a flame, his stomach threatened to heave.
"Thank you," he
gasped. "I don't know how you did that, but thanks."
"Didn't I tell you that
nothing on earth can hurt you here?"
"I guess you did."
He looked up at her. "Who are you? Really."
Anya smiled. "Your
mother."
The familiar words chilled
Jack.
"That's what the
Russian lady said to me by my sister's grave. And that Indian woman in Astoria
said the same thing to Gia. What's it mean?"
Anya shook her head.
"Don't worry about it, hon. There's no need for you to know. Not yet.
Hopefully not ever."
"Then why say it to
me?"
Anya had turned and started
walking away. Over her shoulder she said, "Because it's true."
13
Semelee stumbled pantin and sweatin along the path through
the palms. She stopped and leaned against a gumbo limbo tree to catch her
breath.
That same old lady...doin it
again...causin trouble, gettin in the way...
She was stronger than Semelee.
Somehow she'd just waved her hand and told the bees and Dora to get home and
that was that. Semelee's power got canceled like turnin off a light. Everything
went black. When she come to, the sun was pretty much down and she was flat on
her back in the ferns with the shells off her eyes but still in her hands.
She had to be stopped. But
how? How do you stop someone with that kind of power?
Where did she come from? Who
was she that she could protect herself from Dora and a swarm of bees-not only
keep them out but give them orders?
Maybe she couldn't be hurt.
Maybe she was beyond Semelee's special power.
She stumbled up to the bank
of the lagoon and saw Luke sitting on the deck of theBull-ship.
He looked up at her with sad
eyes. "Bad news, Semelee. Devil's dead."
A wave of sadness washed
over her. Feelin weak, she lowered herself to the ground and rested her back
against a palm.
Poor Devil...her fault...if
she hadn't-
No, wait. It was that old
bitch and her dog. They were the ones killed Devil. Not her.
She ground her teeth. Had to
be a way to get back at her.
She glanced to her left
toward the sinkhole and saw the glow of the lights seepin up through the darkenin
air. Pullin herself to her feet she walked over. She stopped at the edge, then
stretched herself out flat on her belly with her head pokin over the rim. She
gazed into the flashin deeps and tried to remember more of what happened down
there. But nothin came back to her.
She gave up tryin to
remember and was just startin to get to her feet when she had an idea. She
still had the eye-shells in her hands and figured, Why not? She put them over
her eyes. For an instant they blotted out the lights, then suddenly she was
seein them again. But they looked different.
Then Semelee realized she
wasn't seein the lights from above, she was seein them from within. She was
inside some kinda creature down there and was seein things through its eyes.
She looked around and saw wings and jaws and teeth-lots of long, sharp teeth.
An idea crept into her head,
an idea so wonderful she started to laugh out loud.
14
"I still say we should take you to the emergency
room," Dad said.
Jack shook his head as he
shivered under the blanket. "I'll be fine, Dad. No doctors."
At least not yet.
He sat on the sofa and shook
despite the dark blue wool blanket wrapped around him. Most of his sting-lumped
skin was crusted pink with calamine lotion and he was dopey from the Benadryl
his father had picked up for him in town. The stings themselves-he hadn't
counted them, but Pinhead had nothing on Jack-itched and burned, and now his
muscles were aching. The chills and fever had started about an hour after the
attack. He figured he had so much bee venom in his system that he was having a
reaction. He felt as if he had the flu.
At least he wasn't vomiting;
his stomach was queasy but he was holding down the orange juice Dad kept
pushing at him.
He'd shown his father how to
break down the Glock and wipe it dry. Here was where its mostly plastic
construction was a blessing. Dad didn't have any gun oil, but substituted a
little 3-in-1 to lubricate the few metal parts.
And now his father paced
back and forth between Jack and the TV as the Weather Channel showed a
satellite photo of Hurricane Elvis picking up speed and power as it looped
southward through the Gulf of Mexico. It had graduated to Category II and was
expected to brush South Florida and the Keys sometime tomorrow, then continue
on toward Cuba.
"We've got to call the
cops," Dad said.
Dad always seemed to want to
call the cops.
"And what-tell them
about this woman in the Glades who sent a swarm of bees and a two-headed
snapping turtle after me? They'll take you away in a straitjacket."
"We've got to
dosomething ! We can't just sit here like targets and let her take potshots at
us!"
"I can't think right
now, Dad."
Jack hauled himself
unsteadily to his feet and shuffled toward the guest bedroom.
He'd planned to drop in on
Anya tonight. He'd cut her too much slack, let her evade straight answers for
too long. He was going to get nose to nose with her and find out exactly who
she was, how she could keep giant alligators and bees and mosquitoes from
trespassing on her property, and have them obey her when she told them to take
off. He wasn't going to leave until he had some answers.
But that was all changed
now. Christ, he felt awful. If he'd been sitting on the hood of Dad's car when
it got clocked by that truck, he didn't think he'd feel much worse.
"I'm going to hit the
rack. In the meantime, don't do anything I wouldn't do."
"That's all fine and
dandy," Dad said with a touch of acid in his voice, "except I don't
knowwhat you wouldn't do."
"Well, for one thing, I
wouldn't leave the house tonight, that's what I wouldn't do. As for what Iwould
do"-he pointed to the reassembled Glock resting on a section of the
NovatonExpress -"I'd keep that handy. See you in the morning."
15
Jack awoke bathed in sweat. He threw back the covers, sat
up, and pulled off his undershirt.
What time was it? The
clock's LED display was angled away from him. No light filtered through the
curtains. Still night. He ran a hand over a tender, bumpy arm. God, he felt
like hell.
As he flopped back and
pulled the sheet up over him, he thought he heard a dog barking-high-pitched
yips that could only belong to Oyv. They had an almost hysterical edge. Jack
wondered what was bothering him. Not that the little guy couldn't take care of
himself-look at what he'd done to that big ugly gator-but he hadn't struck Jack
as the kind of pooch to bark at nothing.
Jack was ready to force
himself out of bed to go have a look when the barking stopped. Whatever had set
off Oyv must have passed.
Jack closed his eyes and
drifted back to sleep.
Sunday
1
I'vegot to get back to New York, Jack thought.
Not just because he missed
Gia and Vicky, but here it was Sunday afternoon and instead of watching the
Jets kick Dolphin butt up at Giants Stadium, he was sitting here with his
father and staring at the Weather Channel.
Trouble was, he found it
mesmerizing.
The Weather Channel as a way
of life...scary.
I stay much longer I'll be
as addicted as everybody else around here.
He excused his present
fascination by the fact that the weather was about to have significant personal
impact: Hurricane Elvis had reentered the building. In fact he was announcing
his presence with a chorus of gusts that hurled sheets of rain against the
outside of this little building.
Satellite tracking of Elvis
showed how it had made a sharp eastward turn during the night and homed in on
the Everglades like a cruise missile. At this moment its eye was making
landfall on South Florida's west coast. Elvis wasn't a monster; it was a tight
little storm with sustained winds now in the 120-mile-an-hour neighborhood,
making it a Category III. Multiple waterspouts had been spotted among the Ten
Thousand Islands, wherever they were. But apparently it was a very wet storm
and everyone was happy that it was going to dump a lot of much needed rain onto
the Everglades.
But how many times could you
watch the same graphic and listen to the sameStorm Center report?
Gia apparently had been
watching the weather too. She'd called to tell him to stay inside. Not that he
had any intention of venturing out into this mess, but he appreciated her
concern. He hadn't told her about the bee stings. They were still swollen; not
as much as last night, but still itchy and tender.
He was about to ask his
father to switch the channel for half a minute-not a second more than that, God
forbid-to check the score of the Jets game, when he heard a frantic knocking on
the door. As his father peeled himself away from the tube to see who it was,
Jack slipped the Glock from where he'd stowed it under his sofa cushion.
"Better let me get it,
Dad."
But before either of them
could reach the door, it blew open. Jack had the pistol up and aimed at the
figure standing in the doorway, his finger tightening on the trigger, when he
recognized Carl.
"Come quick!" he
cried as wind swirled around him and scattered sections of the Sunday paper. He
wore a dripping, dark green poncho, had a screwdriver sticking out of his right
sleeve, and a plastic shopping bag clutched in his left. "Y'gotta see
this, y'just gotta!"
"See what?" Dad
said.
"Miss Mundy's place!
It's all tore up!"
Carl turned and started to
lead the way, but once they were outside in the slashing wind and rain, Jack
broke into a trot and pulled ahead of him. The sudden memory of Oyv's barking
last night sent a cold spike of unease through his chest. It speared down
through his gut when he saw her doorway.
"Oh, shit!"
The screen had been
shredded; gray, moss like tatters fluttered within the frame. The wooden door
behind it stood open.
"Anya!" Jack
shouted as he pulled open what was left of the screen door and stepped inside.
He stopped suddenly, just
beyond the threshold, causing Dad to bump into him, pushing him forward.
"Oh, dear God!" he
heard his father gasp.
"Didn't I tell
you?" Carl said. "Didn't I?"
The place was a shambles.
That was the only word for it. The furniture had been torn apart, the carpet
gouged up, and the plants...they'd been torn from their pots, their roots
savaged, and every leaf had been torn from the ravaged branches.
Jack forced himself to move
forward, calling Anya's name as he checked both bedrooms and behind the kitchen
counter. He found a small spatter of darkening red fluid, and something that
looked like a severed finger on the floor.
Jack knelt for a closer
look. It was pale, the size of a finger, but it was covered with fur.
What the-?
And then he knew: Oyv's
tail.
Christ! The blood...Oyv had
to be dead-died defending Anya no doubt. A slow wave of sadness settled over
him. But what could have killed that preternaturally tough little dog? It had
to be something bigger and meaner than a giant alligator. But what? And where
was the rest of him?
Jack noticed something
glittering on the floor. He bent closer: three little slivers of glass. He
looked around for a broken window but didn't see one. Maybe a glass had been
knocked off the counter and shattered.
He was pushing himself to
his feet when he noticed that all three shards appeared identical. Each about
an inch and a half long, with the same curve, and the same taper from thicker
base to needle-fine point. He picked one up and rotated it in the light. Its
edges were smooth, rounded. If he didn't know better, he'd have said it was a
fang of some sort. But he didn't know anything that had glass teeth.
He touched the point with
the tip of his finger and it slipped through the skin like a bird's beak
dipping into water.
Damn! He started to toss it
back to the floor, then decided not to. Maybe he should find out what it was
before he threw it away.
He rose and grabbed a paper
towel from the roll suspended from the underside of a cabinet. He rolled the
needle within and used it to blot the drop of blood oozing from his fingertip.
He turned to his father and
Carl, still standing in the doorway.
"What the hell happened
here?"
Dad could give him only a
stunned look, but Carl held up his plastic shopping bag.
"It's all here!"
"What's all
there?"
"What happened. The
camera caught it all. Or at least most of it."
2
"When I picked up the camera this morning," Carl
said, "I was in a hurry so it just sat in the bag till after I got home.
Long after I got home."
They'd all hurried back to
Dad's place to set up the camera for playback.
"You didn't check it
right away?"
"Nuh-uh. I figured,
what for? I mean, I ain't never seen nothin before and figured this wouldn't be
no different. So I just left it be until I was watchin the Dolphins game.
That's when I checked it and found the battery didn't have no charge left. That
ain't happened before. So I recharged it and took a look to see if somethin'd
set it off."
"What's this camera
about?" Dad said.
Jack ran through a quick
explanation of Dr. Dengrove's attempts to catch Anya watering her yard.
"Dengrove," Dad
said. "Cheats at golf but God forbid anyone sneaks a little water onto
their lawn. What an ass."
Jack had the two-inch LCD
screen flipped open. He hitPLAY and started to watch. Dad hung over his
shoulder, Carl crouched farther back. The screen lit with green and black blobs
that quickly stretched and coalesced into recognizable shapes-the side of
Anya's house, her plantings, the doo-dads, the lawn furniture in her front
yard. And then a set of legs went by. Then more.
"Doesn't this thing
have any sound?" Dad said.
"If you hook it up to
your TV you can get sound. Want me-?"
"We can do that later
if we need to," Jack said. He had a sick cold feeling in his gut that
they'd be listening to the high-pitched barking he'd ignored last night.
"First let's see what's to see."
Carl jabbed a finger toward
the little screen. "There they are! See?"
Jack saw. A crowd was
gathering in an irregular semicircle around the edge of Anya's lawn. Light from
the front windows lit their faces. His intestines began to writhe as he
recognized Luke and Corley and a couple of the others. Looked like the whole
gang had shown up.
"The clan," he
said.
"All cept Semelee. I
didn't see her nowheres when I watched."
Jack stared at the tiny
screen. He now wished they'd hooked it to the TV. Probably would have lost some
resolution, but maybe he'd have a better view of their faces. Beyond a few
grins, he couldn't make out much in the way of expressions. He could read their
postures, though, and they radiated something between revulsion and avid
fascination, as if they wanted to press forward for a better look, but fear
held them in check.
He kept watching, waiting
for the clan to do something. He searched for Semelee but couldn't find her.
That white hair of hers would be hard to miss. Why were all the men there? What
did they have against-?
Oh, right. The big ugly
alligator...her dog had chewed a hole in its side. And the bees
yesterday...Anya had chased them off. Yeah, he could see where Semelee could
have a bone or two to pick with Anya. But how was she going to get her if
Anya's promise-Nothing on earth can harm you here-was true?
Obviously it wasn't. Someone
had got to her-and to poor little Oyv. What had Semelee-?
"There!" Carl
cried. "Didja see that?"
"No." Jack's
attention had been wandering. "What?"
"I saw something
too," Dad said, "but I don't know what."
Jack found the reverse
button and backed up the recording. Again he watched Luke and the rest of the
men standing in their semicircle, eyes fixed on the front of the house. The
camera angle didn't include the front door, but they were staring like there
was a stripper doing her thing there. And then something-maybe three
somethings, two feet long at most-suddenly streaked out of the house and over
their heads. The way the men ducked and covered made it pretty obvious that
they were afraid of the things, whatever they were. More flew out. Once they
were gone, the clan came to life. Luke swung an arm and they all charged toward
the house.
For a good five to seven
minutes, nothing happened, and then the clan reemerged. A group of them seemed to
be carrying something but the way they were bunched together prevented him from
seeing exactly what. He didn't have to see. He knew.
"They've got
Anya."
"The sons of
bitches," Dad said, straightening and reaching for the phone. "I'm
calling the cops."
Jack grabbed his arm.
"Hold on a sec. I want to see this again-on the TV."
"Fine. And while you're
setting that up, I'll be calling-"
"Just wait, okay? Just
let me see it again before we get officialdom involved."
Dad reluctantly agreed,
grumbling about wasting time as Jack wired the camera to the audio-visual
inputs on the backside of the TV.
"This happened at least
twelve hours ago, Dad. Maybe more. Another ten minutes isn't going to
matter."
He finished plugging in the
wires, then reran the movie. The TV screen offered over one hundred times the
viewing area of the camera's LCD. It offered sound as well. The movie began
with the rattle of the lawn-ornament cans and Oyv's barking, but that broke off
with a high-pitched squeal just as the last of the clan reached the front of
the house. A couple of minutes later the things streaked away. Jack was ready
with his finger on thePAUSE button.
"Got 'em!" he
said. He leaned closer to the screen. "But what the hell are they?"
The camera's image
intensification coupled with the speed of the things left little more than
amorphous, blurry streaks on the screen, but there was enough resolution to
reveal five shapes instead of three in the first batch. He'd missed the other
two because they were farther from the camera and hadn't caught as much light.
He could see that the three in front had slightly curved bodies that reflected
light like a shell might; their wings were fuzzy blurs.
"Y'ask me," Carl
said. "They look like flyin lobsters."
Not a bad characterization,
Jack thought. But lobsters didn't fly, so what on earth were these?
Jack felt his neck muscles
tighten. On earth...
Nothing on earth can harm
you here.
But what if those flying
lobsters weren't from anywhere on earth? What if they were somehow from the
Otherness? Semelee had gone down into that sinkhole. Maybe she'd found
something down there that she could control like she did the creatures in the Glades.
Jack pulled the rolled-up
paper towel out of his jeans pocket and unwrapped the little crystal shard.
"What have you got
there?" Dad said.
"Not sure." He
handed it to him on the towel. "Careful. It's sharp. Ever seen anything like
it?"
"I did," Carl
said. "Saw one just like it stickin outta the tore-up wood on Miss Mundy's
door. I just figgered it was glass."
Dad was holding it up,
rotating it back and forth in the light. "You know, it almost looks like
some weird sort of fang."
Carl laughed. "Glass
teeth! That's funny!"
Dad lifted the beer bottle
he'd been sipping at during the endless weather reports and scratched the
fang's point along the glass. It gave out a faint, high-pitched squeak as it
scored the surface.
Dad frowned. "Not
glass. Much harder. The only thing I know that can scratch glass like that is a
diamond."
"If it is a
tooth," Jack said, "that means that Anya was attacked by things with
diamond teeth."
They all sat silent for a
moment, then Jack restarted the movie. They watched more of the things fly out,
then the clan crowd into the house. When they emerged this time he kept
freezing the frames but got no better view of what they were carrying than
before. What else could it be but Anya?
But alive or dead?
As the movie ended again,
Dad slapped his thighs. "That does it. Time to call 9-1-1."
"Don't bother,
Dad."
"Why on earth
not?"
Jack pulled the Glock from
theSOB holster and checked the magazine: full.
"Because I'm going
after her and I don't want them getting in the way."
3
Tom could only stare at his son. He'd sensed that the Jack
who had gone into Anya's ruined house was a different Jack from the one who'd
come out. But now he'd changed further. His mild brown eyes had turned to
stone; he seemed remote, as if he'd left the room without moving his body.
"After her? Are you
crazy? We trumped a couple of them once because it was a controlled situation
and we had surprise on our side. But all that's changed now. You can't expect
to stroll in there alone and-"
"Won't be alone,"
Carl said. "I'll come along."
Tom noticed Jack's cold eyes
warm briefly at this simple man's unadorned courage. And in that moment he
wished Jack were looking at him like that.
"Not necessary,
Carl," Jack said.
"'Tis. She's a good
lady. Lotsa people look at me funny, some don't even want me around. But she
always smiled at me and when it was hot she gave me lemonade and cookies and
stuff like that. My own mother never treated me that good. And besides, the clan
ain't got no right to do that to her. Semelee's gone crazy. Ever since she come
up outta those lights she's been different. Scary. Who knows what she's got in
mind for Miss Mundy. We gotta get her back."
"But that's what we
have police for!" Tom cried.
He'd resisted the urge to
chime in and say he'd go along too. Anya was a friend, a good one, and his
blood curdled at the thought of her in the hands of a bunch of swampland
inbreds. But it was just because he cared about her that he had to stop this
craziness. Jack's gung-ho plan might wind up putting Anya in greater danger.
Might even get her killed.
"And in case you two
would-be vigilantes haven't noticed," he added, "there's a
Category-Three hurricane blowing out there."
"Exactly why we've got
to take care of this," Jack said. "Who're you going to call? The
Novaton police? Their whole department, along with every other cop south of
Miami, is going to be tied up with the hurricane emergency. They'll be busy
with evacuation, shelters, looting prevention. You know the drill. A
missing-person problem will be put on a back burner till the storm's passed.
Hell, we don't even have proof she was taken."
"But the movie-"
"-will be great in
court. But do you think it will get a bunch of cops running around in boats out
in the Everglades looking for a particular hummock in the middle of a
hurricane?"
Tom had to admit he doubted
it-but only to himself. Under no circumstances did he want Jack going out
there-not even with Carl, who Tom couldn't see as much help.
"Carl," Jack said,
pointing to the screwdriver protruding from his sleeve. "Do me a favor and
use that to take the medicine cabinet out of the wall in the bathroom."
Carl gave him a strange
look-imagine that-then shrugged and nodded and said, "Okay."
"Medicine
cabinet?" Tom said. "What-?"
Jack turned his back and
headed for the hall closet.
"Look, Dad," he
said as he knelt by the toolbox and began rummaging through its contents. "I
don't know for sure, but I think that taking Anya has something to do with the
lights. But the lights only last a couple of days. By tonight or early tomorrow
morning they'll be gone for another six months."
"What lights?"
"Oh, yeah. Right. I
forgot." He pulled a socket wrench from the toolbox and headed for the
dinette table. "You don't know about the lights."
"Care to enlight en
me?" Tom said, following. "And what do you think you're going to do
with that wrench?"
"You'll see. As for the
lights, forget about them for now. Take too long to explain. What matters is
that after the lights go out, Semelee and Company will have no more need to
hang around their lagoon. Good chance they'll be gone by sunup tomorrow."
"And take Anya with
them?"
Jack gave him a stony look
before he crouched under the table and began loosening the nuts that fastened
it to its support pillar.
"I doubt it. She's the
one whose dog chewed a hole in the side of that big mutant gator, remember? I'm
worried they'll feed her to it before they go-if they haven't already."
Tom felt his knees go
rubbery. "No...they couldn't."
"Let's hope not."
"Hey!" Carl called
from the bathroom. "They's only one screw holdin this cabinet in place and
that's only halfway in."
"I know," Jack
called back. "Just twist it out."
One screw? Tom brushed aside
questions about his medicine cabinet. The thought of Anya being hurt
overshadowed all that.
"Jack, we've got to
call the police. Or the Coast Guard, or the Park Service."
Jack stuck his head out from
under the table and gave him a you've got-to-be-kidding look.
"She's a friend, Dad. A
better friend than you know. And I owe her."
"For what?"
"For you being
alive."
"What are you talking
about?"
"She's the one who
reported your accident to the police twenty minutes before it happened."
"That's as crazy as
going out in this storm. She told you that?"
"She didn't. But I've
no question in my mind that's what happened. She knows things, Dad. All sorts
of things. And now she needs help. When a good friend needs help, you don't call
on somebody else. You go yourself."
The words struck a chord
deep within Tom. Yes, he knew that. He'd been taught that. He'd lived that. But
where had Jack come by it?
And yet he couldn't allow
himself to bend here, couldn't let Jack go out into that storm against twenty
men.
"Where's that
written?"
Jack slipped out from under
the table and rose to his feet, his face barely a foot away. He tapped a finger
on the center of his forehead.
"In here. Right in
here."
Yes...that was where it
would be. But not the only place.
He tapped his son's chest,
over the heart. "In there too."
Jack nodded. "Yeah.
There too."
And as they stood staring at
each other, Tom flashed back to Korea. That had been the Marine code: Nobody
gets left behind. At least nobody still breathing. Sometimes you had to leave
your dead, but you never left your living. If someone was stranded, or hurt and
unable to get out on his own, you went in and got him.
And you didn't call on
anyone else because there wasn't anyone better. You were US Marines, the
toughest sons of bitches on earth. It was a matter of pride. If you couldn't do
it, no one could.
Back at Chosin, when Tom
took that piece of shrapnel in the gut, he'd radioed in that he'd been hit and
couldn't make it out. He'd expected his buddies towant to come and get him, but
figured there was no way with all the shit coming down on the Fifth. But damned
if three of them hadn't shown up after dark and carried him out.
"Help me lift off this
top," Jack said.
"What on earth
for?"
"Let's just do
it."
Tom grabbed one side, Jack
the other. They lifted it, tilted it, and leaned it against the kitchenette
counter. Then Jack reached into the hollow interior of the post and came up
with a black plastic bag. Its lumpy contents clunked together as he laid it on
the counter.
"What the hell? How'd
that get in there?"
"I put it in the other
day. Let me tell you, I had one hell of a time maneuvering that tabletop around
on my own."
"But what've you got in
there?"
Jack reached in and came out
with a fist-size lump of metal that he flipped over the counter. Tom caught it,
saw what it was-a smooth metal sphere the size of a tennis ball, with a key
ring at the top attached to a safety clip-and felt his heart trip over a beat.
"A grenade?"
"M-67s. I had a dozen
sent down after seeing that gator."
"Sent down when? I
never saw any-" And then it hit him. "The toys. They were in the
toys, right?"
Jack gave him a tight smile.
"Right. I also-"
"Hey!" Carl called
from the bathroom. "You got a gun in this wall!"
"What?"
A gun? In his wall? Tom
started toward the bathroom but Jack got there first. Carl had pulled the
medicine cabinet from the wall, exposing the studs and the unfinished backside
of the Sheetrock of the opposite wall. The end of an empty metal tube jutted a
couple of inches up from the lower end of the space. It had a blued-steel
finish and looked like an open plumbing pipe until Tom spotted the bead sight
on the end and realized this was the business end of a shotgun barrel.
Jack fished it out and
handed it to Carl. Its black polymer stock barely reflected the overhead
lights.
"Ever use a
shotgun?"
Carl laughed. "You
kiddin? Fed myself mostly by fishin and huntin before I came to work here. If'n
I wasn't no good, I'da starved." He took it from Jack and hefted it.
"But I ain't never see one like this before."
Neither had Tom. He saw a
breechlock, a magazine tube, but where was the slide handle?
"It's a Benelli-an M1
Super 90, to be exact. I think the semi-auto action will work best for
you."
"A semi-auto
shotgun?" Tom said. "I didn't even know they made such a thing."
"She's a beauty,"
Carl said. "I like the rubber grip. Kinda like a pistol."
"Very much like a
pistol. Will you be able to handle it?"
"Sure. I told
you-"
"I mean"-Jack
glanced at Carl's right sleeve-"will you need to modify the stock or
anything?"
"Nuh-uh. I'll be
fine."
"Great. Excuse me,
Dad," he said as he turned and edged by Tom into the front room. "Be
back in a minute."
Without another word he ran
out into the storm. Two minutes later he returned, dripping, carrying an oblong
object wrapped in a blanket Tom had last seen in the linen closet. He pulled it
off to reveal another shotgun.
"I'll use this
one," Jack said.
With its ridged slide handle
riding under the barrel, this one was more like how Tom pictured a shotgun. Its
polymer stock was done up with standard camouflage greens and browns.
"It looks
military," Tom said.
"It is. It's a Mossberg
590, made to military specs. Very reliable." He started across the front
room. "Now...one last thing and we'll be set to go."
Tom followed Jack around to
the guest bedroom where Jack pulled out the bottom drawer on the dresser and
laid it on the floor. Tom watched in shock as his son reached into the space
beneath and produced one box of shells, then another, then another...
"Jesus, Jack! Did you
think you were going to war?"
"After I saw that
gator, I figured a little old 9mm pistol wasn't going to do the job, so I
ordered up some heavy artillery."
"Buttwo shotguns?"
"Well, yeah. One for
here and one for the car, in case something happened while we were out."
Carl stepped into the
doorway, carrying the Benelli. "What you got this loaded with?"
"With what's known as a
'Highway Patrol cocktail'-alternating shells of double-ought buckshot and
rifled slugs." He held up one of the boxes. "Here are our
reloads."
Tom felt a tightening in his
chest. He didn't know if it was his heart or dismay at what was happening here.
He slipped past Carl, went to his own bedroom, and pulled the M1C from the
closet. He carried it back to Jack and Carl.
"What are you doing
with that?" Jack said.
"Well, since I can't
talk you out of this insanity, I guess I'll have to come along."
"No way, Dad."
Tom felt his anger flare.
"Aren't you the one who just gave me a lecture on going out for a friend
in trouble?"
"Yeah, but-"
"And have either of you
ever been in a firefight?" He didn't wait for an answer. "No, of
course not. Well, I have. And that's what you could very easily wind up in.
You're going to need me."
"Dad-"
Tom jabbed a finger at him.
"Who put you in charge anyway? Besides, your mother would never forgive me
if I let you go out there without backing you up. I'm in."
Jack stared at him a moment,
then sighed. "All right." He held out the Mossberg. "But put
away that antique and take this."
"But I'm more
comfortable with-"
"Dad, it's going to be
dark with all sorts of wind and rain. Let's hope we can pull this off without
any gunplay, but if it comes to that, we'll be working close-maybe twenty-five
feet, fifty max. A sniper rifle's no good in that situation."
Tom had to admit he was
right. He reluctantly took the shotgun.
"But what are you going
to use?"
"I'll have the
grenades. But I'll also have..." Jack reached back into the space below
the drawer and pulled out a huge revolver. It had a gray finish and was well
over a foot in length. The barrel alone looked to be about ten inches long.
"Oh, man!" Carl
said. "What'sthat ?"
"Took the words right
out of my mouth," Tom said.
"A Ruger Super Redhawk
chambered for .454 Casull rounds. I do believe this will stop that gator if he
shows up again."
"Looks like it'll stop
a elephant," Carl said.
A discomforting thought
started worming through Tom's brain.
"Jack...you're not in
one of these right-wing paramilitary groups, are you?"
He laughed. "You mean
like the Posse Comitatus or Aryan Nation? Not a chance. I'm not a joiner, and
even if I were, I wouldn't join them."
"Then what are you?
Some sort of mercenary?"
"Why are you asking all
this?"
"Why do you think?
Because of all these guns!"
Jack looked around.
"Not so many."
"You didn't answer my question,
Jack. Are you a mercenary?"
"If you mean one of
those soldiers of fortune, no. But people do hire me to, well, fix things. I
guess that might make me a mercenary. But-"
Just then the TV started
emitting high-pitched beeps. They all hustled into the front room. A red banner
took up the lower quarter of screen, announcing that a hurricane-spawned
tornado had set down in Ochopee.
"Where's Ochopee?"
Jack said.
"Other side of the
state," Carl replied. "Way out Route 41."
Jack looked at Tom.
"Anyone wants to back out, now's the time. No explanation required, no
questions asked."
Carl grinned. "Hey, I
live in a trailer park. You know how tornadoes zero in on them places. I figure
I gotta be safer out in the Glades."
Just then, lightning lit the
windows, followed by a rumble of thunder.
Tom's gut crawled, but he said,
"Let's get moving."
And God help us all.
4
Jack drove his paddle into the water to keep the canoe
moving against the wind and driving rain. He had a terrible feeling that it
might already be too late for Anya, but if not, then the sooner they reached
her, the better.
Carl sat in the stern,
working the little motor, steering them along the channel. Dad had the front,
Jack the middle seat. When the channel nosed them into the wind, the engine
didn't have what it took to keep them moving; that was when he and Dad put
their paddles to use.
He'd never seen rain like
this. He'd expected it to be cold, but it was almost warm. When it wasn't
lashing them with horizontal cascades that would put Niagara Falls to shame, it
pelted them with huge, marble-size drops that did drum rolls on the hood of his
poncho. The rest of the Glades had gone away; the world had narrowed to a short
length of the channel's rippling water with only occasional glimpses of its
banks. Everything else, including the sky, had been swallowed by dark gray
sheets of wet. Only the ever more frequent flashes of lightning and roars of
thunder hinted that there might be a world beyond.
Good thing the hardware
store had been open so he and Dad could pick up ponchos-dark green, like
Carl's-and a hand pump. He didn't want to imagine what this trek would have
been like without the ponchos. Jack had his hood pulled tight around his head,
the drawstring knotted at his throat. Still he was getting wet.
And the hand pump-they
wouldn't have got even this far without it. Into the wind, they paddled; when
the twisting channel put the wind to their backs, Jack let Dad rest while he
worked the pump to rid them of the rainwater that kept accumulating around
their feet.
The canoe had been flooded
when they found it. They'd flipped it to empty it, then wasted precious time
trying to get the little motor to turn over. Carl finally got it going and they
were off.
Jack cupped his hands around
his mouth and leaned back toward Carl.
"Did we get to the
shallows yet?" he shouted above the din of the rain.
Carl nodded. "Just
passed them."
And we didn't have to get
out and walk, Jack thought. Testament to the amount of water falling out of
that sky.
"Let me know when we're
almost to the lagoon."
Ahead of him Jack noticed
that his father had stopped paddling. His oar rested across his lap as he
rubbed his left shoulder.
"You okay?" he
said, leaning forward.
Dad turned sideways. All
Jack could see was his profile; the rest of his head was tucked into the poncho
hood.
"I'm okay. Just not
used to this sort of thing. At least I don't have to worry about the
lightning."
"Why not?"
"I tried to lead an
orchestra once and found out I was a poor conductor."
Jack gave him a gentle
shove. "One more of those and we toss you overboard!" He could see
Dad was exhausted, but not too exhausted to come up with a rotten pun. He
gripped his shoulder. "Take a breather. We're almost there."
Dad gave a silent nod.
Jack bent his back into
paddling, forcing the canoe ahead into the wind. And as he sweated, he planned.
They'd reach the lagoon soon. He tried to picture the layout...the houseboats,
the huts on the bank. Would the clan be on the boats or ashore? Would they be
at the lagoon at all?
Had to be. The lights would
keep them there.
Light...it was fading fast.
Somewhere on the far side of Elvis the sun was crawling toward the horizon, but
the storm swallowed up its light, leaving Jack and company in growing darkness.
Good. The lower the light,
the longer it would take the clan to figure out how much backup Jack had
brought along.
He felt a tap on his
shoulder: Carl.
"We'll be getting to
the hummock soon."
The storm seemed to let up
as they fought their way into the rainforestlike tunnel of green at the edge of
the hummock. The palms, banyans, and gumbo limbo trees seemed to hang lower
under the weight of the rain; aerial roots and vines brushed against their
ponchos.
"Couple more turns and
we'll be in the lagoon," Carl said.
Jack leaned back.
"Should we shut off the motor?"
At that moment a bolt of
lightning struck close enough for Jack to hear its buzz and sizzle; the almost
simultaneous blast of thunder hit him like a fist.
He could just barely hear
Carl through the ringing in his ears: "I don't think that'll be a problem.
You?"
"Probably not, but shut
down anyway."
No telling what kind of
vibrations the little motor might set up in the hulls of those ships. Why risk
tipping them off?
Wind and rain blasted them
again as the canoe slipped out of the tree tunnel and into the relative open.
Straight for a while, then around a bend and they were in the lagoon.
At least he thought it was
the lagoon. The water was wider and he could see only the near bank on his
right, but where were the houseboats? He had a bad moment as he looked around
and couldn't find them, then a flash of lightning lit up the area and he saw
both boats through the rain, floating straight ahead. TheBull-ship sat to the
left, theHorse-ship to the right.
Dad must have spotted them
too because he turned and started motioning toward the right bank.
"Put it in over
there!" he said.
Jack figured he must have
his reasons-and he was, after all, the only one with military training-so he
passed the message to Carl.
When the canoe nosed into
the bank, Dad hopped out and motioned Jack and Carl ashore. He led them to the
lee side of a stand of twisted palms where they could converse without
shouting.
"If they're here,"
Dad said, "they're on those boats. Agreed?"
Jack nodded.
"Agreed."
"Okay. Then we need to
deploy ourselves around the bank at wide intervals along a hundred-fifty-degree
arc, no bigger."
"Why not?" Jack
asked.
"Because when you get
much closer to one-eighty you run the risk of shooting at each other. Ideally
we want all three of us to have line of sight to both boats, but if that
doesn't work, then the two flanking guns will concentrate their fire on the
nearer boat; the gun in the center can fire on either-wherever it's most
needed."
"Dad, I'm looking to
get this done without turning the lagoon into the OK Corral."
"Amen to that, but we
have to be prepared for a worst-case scenario." Dad patted the Mossberg
through his poncho. "To get the most out of shotguns in this rain and low
light, we'll need to set up about fifty to seventy-five feet from the boats.
That's closer than I'd like, and lots closer than I'm used to, but these
conditions don't leave us much choice."
Dad's takeover of the
tactics impressed Jack. He seemed to be talking from experience, so Jack
deferred to his judgment.
"Just don't set up too
near the cenote," Jack warned him. "You might see some lights shining
up from it, but don't get curious. Just stay away."
"You mean the
sinkhole?" Carl said. "I'll take that spot. The lights've already
done what they're gonna do to me."
Dad said, "Speaking of
lights, if we do get into a firefight, don't stay in one spot. We can hide
pretty well in the rain and the dark, but our guns don't have flash
suppressers, so once we start firing, the muzzle flash will give away your
position. Fire and move, fire and move. Unless of course you can time your shot
to a lightning flash, but that's a lot easier said than done."
Jack swung the plastic bag
with the grenades and the big Ruger over his shoulder. "Carl, you take the
north position, near the cenote; Dad, you set up on the south end, I'll take
the middle; that way I can lob a grenade at either boat should the need
arise."
Which he hoped wouldn't. He
didn't feature being shot at, and liked his father being shot at even less. The
old guy had the experience, and he had the skills, but he also had a body that
didn't move or react like it did in its heyday.
"Anyone see any
problems with that?"
Dad and Carl shook their
heads.
"Good. Okay, once we're
all in position, I'll fire a couple of shots to get their attention, then tell
them I'm from the Novaton Police Department and demand they release Anya or
else."
Dad grinned. "Novaton
Police Department? You're planning to kill them with laughter...is that the
plan? Better off saying you're from the Miami-Dade Sheriff's Department."
"What if they don't buy
it?" Carl said. "What if they start shooting?"
"Then we'll have to
shoot back-unless of course they bring Anya on deck."
"Then what?" Carl
asked.
"Then we
improvise."
Lifting his poncho to reveal
the Mossberg, Dad spoke to Carl. "Since these are loaded with alternating
slugs and double-ought, I suggest we aim the buckshot at the decks and the
slugs at the waterline, preferably near the bow. Anywhere but the
superstructure. At this range the boat walls will, I hope, stop most of the
shot, but the slugs will go through them like paper, and Anya could be in
there."
Carl nodded. "Gotcha.
Easy. Those boats is too pan-o-ramic to miss."
Dad looked at Carl, then
Jack.
"Don't ask, Dad."
Jack gestured ahead. "Let's go."
"And look out for that
alligator along the way," Dad said.
Carl shook his head. "I
heard Semelee and Luke talkin while I was stuck here and they was sayin Devil
was hurt bad. The way they was talking, I don't think he'll be up for chasin
us."
"Be on the lookout
anyway," Jack said. "Even if he's not, there's still that two-headed
snapping turtle."
"Oh, yeah," Carl
said. His lips tightened. "Dora."
"Two-headed snapping
turtle?" Dad said. "What-?"
"Later, Dad. Just don't
get too close to the water."
"Haven't you both
forgotten about something else to look out for? What about those flying things
that gobbled up Anya's dog and made such a mess of her place? I don't want to
run intothem ."
"A snootful of
double-ought buck will clip their wings, don't you think?" Jack said.
Dad frowned. "If you
can hit them. The ones I saw in the movie were moving pretty damn fast."
On that reassuring note,
Jack turned and led them away from the canoe. Heads down against the wind and
rain, they sloshed through the oaks, palms, and cypresses, keeping a good ten
feet from the water's edge, heading toward the cenote. Well before they reached
it, even through the driving rain, Jack could see the lights flashing up from
its depths.
As they arrived at the rim,
now only an inch or so above the waterline, Dad leaned close to Jack and spoke
in a low voice, barely audible above the storm. "Now isn't this a helluva
thing?" He peered down into the flashing depths. "What on earth is
going on down there?"
"Not sure," Jack
told him. "But you want to avoid too much exposure to those lights."
Dad took a quick step back.
"Why? Radioactive?"
Worse, Jack wanted to say,
but that would stimulate a lot of questions he didn't have time to answer. So
he settled for, "Could be."
Carl stepped ahead and
crouched behind the head of a newly fallen royal palm. "This here looks
like a good spot. Gives me a good bead on theHorse-ship . I'll park here."
Jack nodded and motioned his
father southward. Dad followed, but kept glancing over his shoulder at the
lights from the cenote. They seemed to fascinate him.
Along the way they passed
the clan's little boats-theChicken-ship , theNo-ship , and others-pulled up,
turned over, and tied down on the bank. Jack spied a spot near the old Indian
huts to take cover, but he kept walking. He wanted to see Dad as fully
protected as possible.
He found him a spot behind
the wide trunk of a cypress where he had a good angle on theBull-ship .
Jack gave the old man's
shoulder a gentle squeeze and leaned in close. "Keep your head down, Dad.
And if all hell breaks loose, be careful."
His father patted his hand.
"I'm the soldier here, remember? You just take care of yourself and don't
worry about me."
Jack had a sudden urge to
pull everyone out and head back to Novaton. A dark premonition stole over him,
a feelin that something terrible was about to happen, that fewer would be
leaving here than arrived. But he couldn't turn back now, and he knew neither
his dad nor Carl would go. They'd come too far. And Anya needed them.
One more squeeze of his
father's shoulder and then he hurried back to the ruins of the Indian huts. He
found himself a spot behind a thick support post. He wouldn't have thought it
possible, but it began to rain harder.
Jack squatted and spread his
poncho like an umbrella over the plastic bag. He removed a few of the grenades
and stuck the safety clips into his belt. He pulled out the big Ruger and
checked the cylinder. He didn't have a holster big enough to hold it so he
stuck it in his waistband. The nine-plus-inch barrel was cold and not a comfortable
fit. If Semelee got a look at him she'd probably think he wasvery glad to see
her.
But he wouldn't be. It would
be just fine with Jack if he never saw her again.
He rose and started to cup
his hands around his mouth when he sensed movement behind him. He whirled,
pawing at his poncho, trying to get his hand under its flapping hem, but
stopped when he saw what it was: a small towel, tacked to one of the hut posts,
was flapping in the wind.
Jack waited to let his
racing heart slow-for a second there he'd thought he'd walked into an
ambush-then turned back to the water.
He cupped his hands around
his mouth and shouted.
"Hello the boats!"
He repeated this three times
at top volume before deciding that they weren't going to hear him over the
storm. He pulled out the Ruger and pointed it skyward. He'd never fired one of
these, and had only heard of the .454 Casull round. He knew it was a monster so
he was ready for a loud report and a wrist-jolting kick when he fired two shots
in the air. Even so, the boom surprised him.
That ought to wake them up.
He replaced the two rounds
as he began calling again.
5
"You'll never guess who's out there," Luke said,
grinnin and drippin as he came in from the deck. He wore a yellow slicker and a
Devil Rays cap. Corley and a couple of the other men trooped in behind him,
shakin the water off theirselfs like dogs.
Semelee didn't feel like
guessin-specially if she'd 'never' guess the answer-so she waited for him to
tell her.
Everybody in theBull-ship
had jumped at the sound of those two shots a moment ago. It'd sounded like a
cannon goin off. Luke and the others went out to see what was up. Semelee had
heard some shoutin back and forth but couldn't make nothin out of it due to the
poundin of the rain on the roof and sides of the boat.
Finally Luke told her:
"It's your boyfriend."
Boyfriend? Semelee thought.
What's Luke-? Oh, shit.
"You mean that Jack
guy? He ain't no boyfriend of mine. I hate him."
She did. Sort of. But that
didn't keep her heart from flutterin for a second at the passin thought that
he'd come all the way out here in this for her. But that thought flew out the
window soon as it came. He'd made it awful clear he wasn't interested in the
likes of her.
"Good," Luke said.
"Cause I hate him too. I hate anybody who thinks I'm stupid, and he must
think we're pretty damn stupid. Know what he said? Said he was from the
Miami-Dade Sheriff's office and that he's got a whole passle of cops out there
in the dark with him."
"You sure it's
him?"
"Sure I'm sure.
Recognized his voice, even through the rain. Couldn't see him, but it's
him."
"What's he want?"
"Says he wants the old
lady back. Callin her 'Anya' or somethin like that."
Semelee felt her stomach
plummet. "Then he knows we was there."
She went to one of the
little rectangles of glass that served as windows onBull-ship 's deckhouse and
looked real hard into the storm. The rain splashin against the glass and runnin
down its outside kept her from seein even an inch beyond it.
"He knows
somethin," Luke said, "but he don't know everthing, that's for
sure."
"But how's he know we
was there?" She couldn't imagine Jack just watchin from a window. He and
his daddy woulda come out sure, probably with guns a-blazin.
"Don't know, don't
care," Luke said.
She turned and saw that Luke
had opened a closet and was handin out rifles and shotguns. He pointed to
Corley.
"Get below and haul
everbody up here."
"What you gonna
do?"
He smiled at her again.
"Gonna give him a nice warm lagoon-style welcome and make sure he don't
leave the Glades-least not alive."
"That really
necessary?"
As Semelee watched the men
start pilin up from below decks, grabbin guns, and headin for the deck, she
felt a little somethin stir in her chest. Like sadness. Like guilt. She'd taken
a change of heart about Jack since yesterday afternoon. She'd tried to make him
die then, but afterwards she was a little glad she'd failed. Yeah, he'd turned
her down right to her face, but he'd only been tellin the truth:I'm taken meant
he had someone else he liked better. End of story. He could've lied and then
used her like she'd been used before, then dump her like she'd been dumped
before. That would've been worse. That didn't make her heart hurt any less, but
at least he'd been straight with her.
"I think when he don't
get what he's askin for-and he ain't gonna-then I got a feelin there may be
some shootin. So I figure we'll shoot first."
"What if you're
wrong?" Semelee said. "What if that really is a buncha deputies out
there?"
"Ain't wrong. It's him,
I tell you."
"All right. Say it is.
What if he ain't alone?"
Luke's smile turned real
ugly. "I hope he ain't. I hope he brought Daddy along." He lifted his
cap and ran a hand over his scabbed-up head. "I got me a score or two to
even with that old coot."
Semelee stepped back to the
window. Why did he come? This storm's tearin up the place and yet here he
comes, loaded for bear, lookin for an old lady he only met a couple days ago.
What sort of man does that?
She ducked away from the
window as the gunfire started outside.
Whatever sort of man Jack
is, she thought with a sting of sadness, he's gonna be a dead one pretty soon.
6
Jack had taken cover behind an old fallen trunk at the
first sight of a rifle on theBull-ship 's deck. Good thing too, because they'd
opened up without warning. Dad and Carl had responded immediately. The element
of surprise allowed them to take down a couple of the clan before the rest of
them dropped to the deck to take cover behind the gunwales. TheHorse-ship crew
had their guns out now and the air was filled with wind and water and lightning
and bullets and shot.
Most of the fire from
theBull-ship seemed concentrated on Jack's position. Semelee's idea,
probably...or Luke's...or both. He'd definitely put himself on the wrong side
of those two. When Jack dared raise his head, he fired back with the Ruger. He
wanted Luke. If he could take him out, the rest of the clan would lose their
steam. But Jack couldn't identify him through the dim light and the rain. And
even if he did, he'd be hard to hit. Jack wished he were a better marksman, but
knew if by some chance he did hit Luke he'd be a goner. He was firing Cor-Bon
.454 Casulls, hard-cast, flat-point, 335-grain rounds that jerked the barrel
high every time he pulled the trigger. Which was okay in a way. If he missed,
he wanted to miss high. He didn't want one of those big rounds to plow through
the hull and hit Anya.
The fire on Jack's position
became so intense he didn't dare raise his head to return it. These guys were
good shots. When a lull came, he belly-crawled back to the old huts and took a
position behind a post. Maybe from back here he'd be able to take the time to
aim and make his shots count. He glanced back at that towel flapping in the
rain, thinking it ought to be one damn clean piece of cloth by the time this
storm is done.
Lightning flashed as he
turned back to the boat, revealing a design on the fabric that caught the
corner of his eye. Something familiar about that pattern of lines and dots...
Whatever it was caused a
ripple of nausea, and a chill, as if something has crawled under his hood and
whispered across his neck on spider legs.
Jack fixed his gaze on the
cloth, waiting for the next flash, and when it came he saw the pattern again
and knew where he'd seen it before.
On Anya's back.
With his blood sludging in
his veins, Jack rose and stepped over to the cloth, ignoring the lead whistling
around him, because it had to be a cloth, a cloth someone had drawn on, copying
the pattern they'd seen cut and burnt and punctured into Anya's back. He
reached out and touched it, and when his fingers flashed the message that this
was too thick and entirely the wrong texture for cloth, he slumped to his knees
in the mud. Somehow he managed to hold on to the Ruger.
A sob burst from his lips,
but the grief that spawned it lasted only a few heartbeats before a black
frenzy boiled out of the vault where he stored it and took over. Repressing a
howl of rage, he rolled back to the post and found his plastic bag of grenades.
Breath hissing through bared teeth, he snatched one from within, pulled the
pin, popped the safety clip, and waited, counting...
One thousand and one...
The note Abe had included
with the grenades said the M-67 fuse gave a four-to-five-second delay between
release of the clip and detonation.
...one thousand and two...
It also said each grenade
had a kill radius of fifteen feet and a casualty radius of about fifty. Dad and
Carl weren't much beyond that but he was only peripherally aware of the risk.
His focus was tunneled in on theBull-ship and nothing was going to pull it
away.
...one thousand and three!
As soon as he hit three, he
lobbed the grenade up and out, then ducked behind the pole. If it hit the deck
and exploded, great; if it exploded above the deck, even better.
But he didn't wait for it to
hit before pulling another from the bag. He was popping the clip when the first
went off. He poked his head up as he started counting. His throw had been short
by maybe half a dozen feet, but not a complete loss. It had exploded at deck
level and the screams of the wounded and frightened shouts of the rest were
music.
...three!
This one sailed
towardHorse-ship -no need for them to feel left out-and it too fell short, but
not without doing some damage to hull and human alike.
It looked so much easier in
movies.
Jack was ready to pop the
clip on a third when he heard someone thrashing through the underbrush to his
right. The fact that whoever it was made no attempt at stealth left him pretty
sure it was his father, but he raised the Ruger anyway. Sure enough, seconds
later, Dad burst from a stand of ferns in a crouch and dropped down beside him.
"What the hell are you
doing, Jack?" His eyes were wide; rain ran down his face in rivulets.
"Anya's in one of those boats!"
"No, she's not,
Dad," he said through a constricting throat. "She's dead."
He frowned. "How can
you know that?"
"I found a big piece of
her skin hanging back there."
"No!" he gasped.
Jack couldn't see his complexion but was sure it had gone waxy. "You can't
mean it!"
"I wish I was wrong,
but I saw her back the other day and the same marks are on that piece of skin.
They skinned her, Dad. They fucking skinned her and hung it out to dry."
Dad placed a trembling hand
over his eyes and was silent a moment. Then he lowered the hand and thrust it
toward Jack's sack of grenades. His voice was taut, strained.
"Give me one of
those."
7
Semelee lay tremblin on the floor, head down, hands over
her ears. It sounded as if war had broken out. Those weren't just guns firin
out there. With the explosions and the way the windows was shatterin, it felt
like they was bein bombed.
Luke fell through the door,
grabbin onto a bleedin shoulder.
"They got grenades,
Semelee! They're killin us out there! Corley's dead and Bobby's leg's bleedin
real bad! Y'gotta do somethin!"
"What can I do? Devil's
dead and Dora's no good on land."
"The things from the
sinkhole, the ones you brought up last night...we need em now. We need em
bad!"
"I can't! I told you
before-they won't come up till after sundown."
No matter how she'd tried
yesterday, she couldn't get those awful winged monsters to come out of the hole
while the sun was up. But as soon as it went down, they were hers-or so she'd
thought.
She'd almost lost it when
she first saw them. She hadn't been able to get a good look at them while they
was down in the lights, but once they was up in the air, in the twilight, what
she saw scared her so much she almost dropped her eye-shells.
The most horrible lookin
critters she'd ever seen.
They was the size of
lobsters-not the crawdadlike things around these parts; no, these was thick and
heavy, like the big-clawed ones from up north. These things had shells and
claws too, but that's where the likeness ended. Their bodies was waisted, like
a wasp's, and they had wings, two big transparent ones on each side, sproutin
from the top of the body like a dragonfly's.
Chew wasps-that was the name
that popped into her head, and it seemed to fit them perfect.
Plus they had teeth. Oh God
did they have teeth-each had big jaws that opened wide as a cottonmouth's, and
they was filled to overflowin with long sharp transparent fangs that looked
like slivers of glass. One of the weirdest touches was the rows of little blue
dots of lights along their sides that glowed like neon. They looked like they'd
been drug up from the bottom of the sea where the sun don't shine, a place so
deep and dark that even God's forgot about them.
God...he must've been havin
a real bad day when he made those things. She had to wonder what kind of a
world they came from, and how anything else survived with them roamin free.
"It's dark as night out
there now! Give it a try! You gotta! They're putting holes in the hull. They're
tryin to sink us!"
"But why're they tryin
to do that? Why're they throwin grenades, Luke? If they think we got the old
lady and they want her back, ain't they afraid of killin her along with
us?"
"Who knows why, damn
it!" Luke shouted. "They've gone crazy!"
But Semelee caught a look in
his eyes, like he was hidin somethin.
"What is it, Luke? What
changed their minds? What makes them think she's not here, or that she's dead?
You didn't open your big mouth, did you?"
"No. Course not. What
kinda fool you take me for?"
"Well, then what? What,
Luke?"
Luke looked away. "I
guess they found her skin."
"What? How could they
do that? You buried it." Luke still kept lookin away. "You did bury
it like I told you to, didn't you, Luke?"
He shook his head.
"Nuh-uh. I hung it up to let the rain clean it off, then I was gonna tan
it...you know, like a hide."
Semelee closed her eyes. If
she had a gun right now she'd've shot Luke-right through his stupid, brainless
head.
Her thoughts flashed back to
last night...
She'd been in a frenzy,
completely out of control...so pissed at that old lady for killin Devil and
then ruinin her plans for Jack that she just...lost it. All the trouble she had
gettin those things to come out of their hole didn't help matters none either.
By the time she realized that they wouldn't come out in the day, she was all
but frothin at the mouth.
When sunset came, so did the
things. She had trouble controllin them from the git-go. Soon as they came out
they wanted to run wild, but she managed to gather them into a group and herd
them toward the old woman's house. When they got there, they went crazy, rippin
through the screen and gnawing through the front door.
Their ferocity frightened
the hell outta Semelee, and she remembered thinkin, Oh, God what have I got
myself into now? And, bein inside them, she was beginnin to feel some of their
bloodlust.
When they got through the
door, there was the old lady, standin in the middle of her livin room, all done
up in one of them funny Japanese dresses. She just stood there smokin a
cigarette. Smokin! It was like she knew she was gonna die. She didn't scream,
she didn't cry, she didn't even fight back.
But her plants did. They
lashed out at the chew wasps and tried to entangle them with her branches. The
wasps splintered them and striped off all their leaves.
But they still couldn't get
to the lady because of her little dog. Semelee especially wanted to even the
score with that mongrel for killin Devil, but he wasn't going quietly. She'd
wondered how such a little thing could've killed the biggest gator she'd ever
seen, and last night she found out. That tiny dog fought like a full-grown
Rottweiler. He brought down two of the chew wasps before three of them ganged
up on him and tore him to pieces.
And then there was nothing
between the chews and the old lady. She didn't try to run, she just stood
there, like she was acceptin what was comin.
That was when Semelee had
second thoughts. She sensed somethin special about this lady-somethingextra
special-and had a feeling she'd be losing somethin precious if she killed her.
Maybe it was the way she was
just standin there. She had to be scared outta her mind but she wasn't showing
it, not one bit.
But the thing that most made
Semelee want to hold off was knowin that this lady wasn't just gonna be killed,
she was gonna be torn apart. Much as Semelee hated her for messin with her
plans, she didn't know if she could go through with that. The other folks she'd
sacrificed here at Gateways had been stung or bit or pecked up, and they'd died
later...not right in front of her.
Semelee was gonna have to
watch this and she didn't have the stomach for it. Maybe gettin her house
wrecked and her dog killed would be enough for the old lady. Maybe she'd learn
her lesson and stop messin where she didn't belong. Maybe she'd even have a heart
attack and die later. A lot better'n bein torn to pieces.
But when Semelee tried to
turn the chew wasps around and bring them home, they wouldn't go. They smelled
blood and there was no stoppin them. They lit into the old lady. And what did
she do? She stood there and raised her arms straight out from her sides and
just let them come.
Semelee wasn't sure if it
was the bravest or craziest thing she'd ever seen, but she did know it was
horrible to watch.
More than watch. Semelee was
in close with the wasps,inside them as they gouged the old lady's flesh,
crunched her bones. She could almost taste it, and gagged now at the memory.
They was so fierce they didn't even let her body fall to the ground. They ate
her upright, even slurped sprays of blood right out of the air. And no matter
what Semelee did she couldn't pull them away. She wanted to drop the eye-shells
but was afraid the chew wasps would turn on the clan who'd gone there just to
see what these ugly-lookin things could do.
Finally, when they were
through, there was nothin left of the old lady but the skin of her back. For
some reason, the chew wasps wasn't interested in it. They gobbled her up from
head to toe, but left that rectangle of skin.
And when they was finished
they started listenin to Semelee again. She quick got them outta there and back
to the sinkhole. Soon as they was back where they belonged, Semelee yanked off
the eye-shells and got real sick.
Back at the old lady's
house, Luke did two things, one smart and one dumb. The smart thing was pickin
up the two dead chew wasps and bringin them back to the lagoon. If people came
lookin for the old lady and found those, it'd be in all the papers and
everyone'd assume they came from the Glades. Soon there'd be scientists and
hunters and cops and thrill seekers all over the place, including the lagoon.
The clan's whole way of life'd be messed up.
The dumb thing Luke did was
bring back the old lady's skin. He-
The boom of another
grenade-sounded like it must've exploded over byHorse-ship -yanked Semelee back
to the here and now.
"Why, Luke?" She
finally opened her eyes and stared real hard at him. "Why'd you do such a
fool thing?"
"I wanted to keep it.
You know, kinda like a souvenir. I like all those marks. They're almost like a
map. But never mind that. Y'gotta try those wasp things again, Semelee! You
just gotta!"
She didn't want to tell him
that she was afraid to. She hated the way they made her feel...like all dark
and ugly inside, with this endless hunger. Even with the gunfire, the
explosions, the howlin wind, the leakin roof, the thunder and lightnin all
around her, this seemed like a better place than where she'd been last night.
But she couldn't just sit
around and do nothin while the whole clan got massacred. She had to do
somethin...and there was only one thing she could do.
Her gorge rose as she pulled
the eye-shells out of her pocket.
"You're gonna do
it?" Luke said, a grin spreadin cross his face.
She nodded. "Yeah, but
you gotta get outta here."
The grin collapsed.
"But Semelee...there's all sorts of shootin out there."
"Then get out there and
shoot back. Just leave me alone so I can save our asses."
"Okay, okay."
He headed for the door in a
crouch, then crawled out onto the deck.
Taking a deep breath,
Semelee pressed the shells over her eyes and went searchin for some chew
wasps...
8
"We're not doing a whole helluva lot of damage with
these things," Dad said after they'd watched the latest grenade sail
through the air and explode off the bow of theBull-ship .
Jack had to agree. He would
have thought that something that small and weighing almost a pound wouldn't get
tossed around by the wind. But this was no ordinary wind. He'd tried
compensating for it by adjusting his throw but the trouble was you couldn't
wing these things like a baseball; you had to lob them, and the wind kept
changing direction.
"We've caused some
hurt, though."
"Not enough," Dad
said, his expression grim. "After what they did to Anya, they..." He
swallowed and shook his head. "They shouldn't be allowed to live."
"I don't think we'll be
able to kill all twenty guys."
Dad gave him a strange look.
"I said they shouldn't be allowed to live. I didn't say we should do the
killing."
Oops. "Oh. Guess I
misunderstood."
"You're scaring me,
Jack."
"Sometimes I scare
myself."
Just then Jack heard
something that sounded like a scream. He looked over toward Carl but couldn't
find him in the dark. Then lightning flashed and he saw him rolling on the
ground as he fought something that had clamped onto his right shoulder. Jack
couldn't get a good look at it, but whatever it was, it wasn't alone. More of
them were lifting out of the cenote and weaving toward Carl. The one that had
him was too close for Carl to shoot at, so he was using the shotgun as a bat.
But Jack could see that he wasn't getting anywhere.
He slapped his father on the
back. "Stay here and keep firing at the boats. Keep them pinned down. When
you reload, forget the slugs and fill up on shot. I think we're going to need
it."
"Where are you
going?"
"Carl needs a little
help."
Rising to a crouch, Jack
pulled the Ruger from under the poncho and ran through the rain. Lightning
flashes lit the scene, and as he neared Carl and got a better look at what was
attacking him, it almost stopped him in his tracks. The thing clinging to his
shoulder had the head and saber-toothed jaws of a viper fish, the shelled body
of a lobster on steroids, and two pairs of long, diaphanous wings. Another of
its kind was gliding in for its own piece of Carl.
Jack stopped, knelt, took
aim with the Ruger and fired. He scored a hit. The big Casull slug tore into
the flying thing, leaving only a spray of greenish blood and a pair of
still-flapping wings. Then Jack leaped next to Carl, rammed the Ruger's muzzle
against the eye of the thing chewing on him, and pulled the trigger. This time,
not even the wings remained.
Carl groaned. "It
hurts, Jack!" His left hand was covered with blood where it clutched his
shoulder through the shredded poncho. "Oh, God, it hurts!"
Jack took only a quick look,
wincing at what looked like exposed bone and a dozen crystalline teeth still
buried in the ragged flesh, then turned back to the cenote. Three more of the
things were up and coming their way. He grabbed the Benelli and started firing.
The semiautomatic action let him get off four shots quickly. They weren't all
direct hits but the shot tore up the wings of the ones it didn't dismember.
"Where are your
shells?" Jack shouted.
Carl jutted his chin toward
a box on the ground. His teeth were bared in agony. He seemed in too much pain
to speak.
Jack started reloading the
Benelli's magazine. If he'd known he'd be facing these things he would have had
Abe send down flechette rounds.
"Think you can
walk?"
Carl nodded.
"Okay, then. Get over
to where my dad is. I'll cover you from the rear."
Spreading out had been a
good idea against the clan, but it meant certain death against these things.
Time to circle the wagons.
"It's Semelee,"
Carl gritted as he lurched to his feet. "She's controllin them." Then
he staggered off.
Jack turned back to the
cenote and found half a dozen more of the things hovering over the opening in a
cluster. He ducked behind a palm trunk and fired once into their center,
knocking down two. They fell into the abyss but were replaced by four more.
Jack felt his stomach knot.
This wasn't good. He hadn't brought enough ammo. But he'd brought his father
and Carl. That made him responsible for them.
In the background he heard
his father firing methodically, rhythmically, at the boats.
Save some of that ammo, Dad,
he thought. We're gonna need it.
And now another four joined
the flock. But they didn't swarm his way...their movements were sluggish and
they didn't seem to know he was there. They milled about, looking confused.
What were they waiting for? Reinforcements?
If more were coming up from
the cenote, maybe Jack could ambush them along the way. He unclipped a grenade
from his belt-only a couple left-pulled the pin, and lofted it toward the
cenote. It passed through the swarm and down into the opening. A few seconds
later he saw a flash, heard a boom, but that was it. The ones fluttering over
the hole didn't even react.
If this were a movie likeRio
Bravo , he'd stumble onto a crate of dynamite, conveniently left behind by a
construction company, and use it to seal the cenote. But this was Jack's world,
not Howard Hawks's. Things never seemed to work out that way for him.
He heard a scream behind him
and recognized the voice this time: Carl again. He looked around and saw him
staggering in a circle at the water's edge. One of those things had its fangs
buried in the back of his neck...and it was chewing...
Where'd that one come from?
Jack leaped to his feet and
took off on a run. He couldn't use the shotgun without hitting Carl too, so he
pulled the Ruger. But before he could use it, Carl pitched over backward into
the water.
That wasn't all bad. The
cenote thing didn't seem to like water. It loosed it's grip and buzzed back
into the air, banking and gliding toward Jack. He already had the Ruger up. He
waited until it was close, then fired at it head on. It dissolved in an
explosion of green. As its wings fluttered to the ground, Jack dropped the
Benelli and the Ruger and jumped into the water to help Carl, who wasn't doing
too well.
The water was waist deep and
cool, its surface churning and bubbling from the wind and rain. The muddy
bottom was slippery and sloped off on a steady decline. A bullet whizzed by,
then another. Someone on theHorse-ship had spotted them. Jack heard Dad's
Mossberg boom, then a cry from the boat, and the bullets stopped coming.
"Carl!" Jack
shouted as he leaned forward and stretched out his arm. "Give me your
hand!"
Carl, with his poncho
floating around him like a lily pad, thrashed and splashed and kicked his way
shoreward. Jack grabbed his outstretched left hand and began hauling him in.
Suddenly Carl was jerked
back. He let out a scream of pain and Jack was barely able to hold on to him as
something pulled him back toward the center of the lagoon.
"Oh, my leg!" he
wailed. "My leg! It's Dora! She's got me! Don't let her have me,
Jack!"
"I won't, Carl."
He started sobbing. "I
don't wanna die, Jack. Please don't let her-"
And then his head plunged
below the surface. Jack tried to dig in his heels but the bottom was too
slippery. Another powerful tug pulled Jack forward so hard he went face first
into the water. He was only under for a few seconds, but during that time he
lost his grip on Carl's hand. His feet found the bottom and he stood again,
shaking the water from his face and eyes. He was shoulder deep now.
"Carl!"
Nothing. No reply, nothing
but empty, wind-and rain-swept water stretching before him. He shouted the name
again and thought he saw a hand break the surface and claw the air maybe fifty
feet away. But it was there for only a second-if it was there at all-and then
it was gone.
"Oh, Carl," he
said softly, staring at the spot. "You poor bastard. I'm sorry. So
sorry..."
A lump formed in his throat.
A good, simple man was gone. Jack had known him just a couple of days, but he'd
come to respect him. He still didn't know what had gone wrong with Carl's right
arm, but that didn't matter. Carl hadn't let it stop him from leading a useful
life. He'd adjusted, with no apologies, no excuses.
A bullet whizzed by Jack and
he realized he was a sitting duck out here.
My fault, he thought as he
quickly waded ashore. If I hadn't bribed him to take me to the lagoon, if I'd
just said no tonight when he wanted to come along, he'd still be alive.
Probably be sitting in his trailer right now watching his TV.
My fault. But not all my
fault.
It's Semelee...she's
controllin them.
Right. Semelee.
Jack reached the bank and
climbed up onto the mud. He looked toward the cenote and saw maybe twenty of
the winged things clustered over the opening. As he watched, they began to fan
out and glide toward him.
His blood cooled at the
sight. No way he and Dad could bring them all down, even standing back to back
with shotguns. Some of them would get through. And once they got you down, you
were finished.
Couldn't stop the winged
things...but maybe he could stop the one controlling them.
With the things trailing
him, Jack ran back to where his father was still firing at the boats. He heard
cheering from the decks as the clan spotted the winged things on Jack's tail.
They didn't shoot. Probably thought it would be more fun to watch him get
gobbled up like Anya.
"Behind me, Dad!
Incoming!"
Dad was crouched behind a
tree, with the trunk between him and the boats. Jack dove for the ground,
sliding through the mud on his belly as his father looked around.
"Where?"
"Right behind me!"
Lightning flashed and he saw
his father's jaw drop.
"Dear God! What
are-?"
"Don't talk,
shoot!"
And shoot he did, pumping
round after round out of the Mossberg into the air behind Jack. Jack didn't
look around to see what effect he was having. He assumed it was about as good
as it got. He laid the Benelli across Dad's knees for when the Mossberg ran
dry, then seated himself back to back with his father and turned to
theBull-ship . If Semelee was anywhere, that would be the place.
He wiped the rain from his
eyes and took aim at the superstructure. The big Casulls would rip through it,
in one plywood side wall and out the other. He couldn't be sure he'd hit
Semelee, but at least he could distract her...
9
This was so hard...
Semelee crouched in the dark
of the cabin and pressed the shells tighter against her eyes. The chew wasps
hadn't wanted to leave the sinkhole until the sun was down, but she'd forced
them. She'd tried that yesterday and it hadn't worked, but this time she was
able to coax them up. Maybe it was the storm or the night like darkness up
here. Whatever the reason, they came. But so slowly...like only one or two at a
time.
Then, once she got them
outta the hole, she could barely see. Had to be because of the sun. Even though
it was hidden behind mountains of storm clouds, it was still above the horizon;
she guessed that whatever was filterin through was enough to affect the eyes of
the chew wasps.
But she'd been able to see
Carl who was right close to the hole and shootin at the boats. Traitor to his
kin! She set a couple of the wasps on him, then went back to draggin others up.
Suddenly one of the ones on
Carl got blowed up. And then the other. She seen it was Jack doin the shootin,
and though she didn't hate him like before, she couldn't let this stand. She
had to end it between them. One of them had to go. Semelee preferred Jack.
She had a whole bunch of the
chew wasps up by then but couldn't get them organized. They wanted to go here
and there and it was just about all she could do to keep them together. Jack
blasted a couple of them out of the air and then got four more with a grenade
in the hole as she was pushin them up.
She had to attack with what
she had, but couldn't get the swarm to move. She could control one of them,
though, so she sent it after Jack. Somehow it wound up on Carl instead. The
wasps seemed attracted to sound and movement, and Carl had been makin plenty of
both.
But she didn't have to send
Dora after Carl when he went in the water-Dora did that on her own.
goodbye, Carl.
Finally she'd got the swarm
to move. She didn't know why she suddenly had more control. Maybe cause the sun
got closer to settin while she was chasin Jack. Didn't know, didn't care, all
she knew now was she was on the hunt. And though her stomach turned at the
thought of havin to go through another chew-up with these things, it had to be
done. The survival of the whole clan depended on her stoppin Jack and whoever
was with him-probably his daddy.
As she guided the wasps
after the runnin Jack, she heard the guys on the deck start to yellin. She
wished they'd shut up. The chew wasps kept wantin to turn toward the noise. The
voices pulled at them. She had to keep forcin them to stay on Jack's trail.
Suddenly a piece of the wall
exploded and showered her with splinters as something whizzed by her head. She
was already crouched on the floor in a corner. Now she dropped flat, and just
in time too. Another big bullet smashed through the cabin, low this time, just
about singeing her butt.
He's tryin to kill me!
She had to move those chew
wasps in on Jack and his daddy. Now!
The old man was shotgunnin
them, so Semelee split the swarm into two groups. She veered one left over the
water, and the other around back. She'd catch em in the middle and-
A third big slug blasted
into the cabin then, but this one didn't go all the way through. It plowed into
one of the benches of the picnic table and sent it flyin against her. She cried
out as it conked her on the head. She didn't think-she put her hands up to
protect herself and dropped the eye-shells.
"Oh no!" She
started feelin around on the floorboards, real frantic like. But it was so dark
in here. "Where'd they go?"
She couldn't control the
chew wasps without em. They'd all go flyin back to the sinkhole if she wasn't
there to hold them.
Or maybe they wouldn't.
Semelee wasn't sure which
would be worse.
10
"Jack!" Dad shouted. "Look!"
Jack was reloading the
Ruger, readying to riddle theBull-ship 's superstructure with a few more
Casulls. He'd been leaning against his father's back, getting rocked forward
whenever Dad's shotgun went off, rocking back with the recoil from the Ruger.
He half turned, not sure of
what he'd heard. His ears were ringing from the thunder and the booms of the
weapons.
"What?"
"Those things. They
were all clustered together at first, then they started dividing into two
groups, and now..."
Jack turned further and
squinted through the rain. He watched for a moment as the cenote things buzzed
around in disarray, practically bumping into one another in midair. It looked
like they didn't know where they were, but the men from the boats were still
cheering them on.
One of the things veered out
over the water; two more followed it; then the whole swarm was making a beeline
for the boats. Suddenly the cheering stopped, replaced a couple of heartbeats
later by the reports of rifles and shotguns. Jack saw the clan knock a few
down, but then the swarm was upon them. The shooting stopped, replaced by
screams of pain and panic.
11
Semelee waited for the lightnin to flash again. That was
the only time she could see what she was doin. Here! A new flash, coming
through the broke windows-where was they? She crouched on her hands and knees,
search in the floor. Where was those damn eye-shells?
At least the big bullets had
stopped poundin through the walls. Not for long she bet. Probably just
reloadin. In another minute-
Somebody started screamin
outside. Then another. She recognized Luke's voice among the hellish choir. He
sounded like he was bein tortured. She jumped to the door and peeked out.
The chew wasps! They was attackin
the clan. Oh shit oh shit oh shit! What was she gonna do?
Another lightnin flash, this
time through the doorway. She looked around just in time to see the shells,
lyin on the floor right up against the wall to her right. She jumped on them and
clutched them tight in her fists.
Thank God! She had them. Now
she could turn the chew wasps away and get them headed back to where they
should be-on Jack and his daddy. But as she raised them to her eyes the door
burst open and somethin came staggerin into the cabin.
Semelee screamed as it
lurched to the left, then the right, then stumbled toward her. Whatever it was,
it didn't look human. It let out a muffled screech and then the lightnin
flashed and Semelee screamed again. It was a man with three of the chew wasps
hangin on him. One on his leg, the other with its head buried in his flank, and
the third with its teeth worryin his face. He screeched again, then spun and
collapsed onto his belly. He twitched a few times, then lay still.
Another flash of lightnin
gave her another look at him. Through the rips in his shirt Semelee saw scales
and finny spines on his back and knew who it was.
"Luke!"
Her eye-shells. She could
use them to get Luke free of the wasps. But before she could get them up, the
one on Luke's leg let go and buzzed straight at Semelee's face. She stumbled
back and fell out the door onto the deck and into a hell on earth. Chew wasps
and blood-soaked men everywhere-and the men who wasn't screamin wasn't movin.
Semelee's arrival got their
instant attention. The chew wasp that chased her out of the cabin was still
comin, but so were others from the deck. The only place to go was the water.
She slipped in blood and
banged her knee as she tried to get up, then broke into a low run and dove into
the water. As she kicked toward shore she knew it would take her right into the
sights of Jack and his daddy. She pressed the shells over her eyes. She had to
get back control of the chew wasps and give those two somethin else to worry
about before she came up for air.
12
During a lightning flash Jack caught a glimpse of
someone-someone small and slim with dead white hair-leaping off theBull-ship
and diving head-first into the water. He watched a couple of cenote things
chase after her and hover a couple of feet over the water, waiting for her to
surface.
He tapped Dad on the arm.
His father was watching the strobe-lit carnage on the boat decks in horrid
fascination. Jack had to tap him again.
"Hey, Dad. Which one of
those is loaded?"
Dad shook himself free of
the spectacle. "Both now."
"Give me one, will
you?"
Dad handed him the Benelli.
Jack took aim at the nearest winged thing, not so much from a desire to protect
Semelee-she deserved just about anything that happened to her-but because he
wasn't up for watching someone being eaten alive.
The shotgun boomed, rocking
his shoulder, and the nearest thing blew apart. But its companion, instead of
retreating or continuing to hover, darted straight for Jack.
He fell back, raising the
Benelli. Good thing it was semiautomatic-those things couldmove . His shot went
a little high, missing the body but dissolving the right pair of wings. It went
into a spin and landed on the edge of the bank, vibrating its remaining wings
and gnashing its teeth in fury as it made circles in the mud.
Movement on the surface of
the lagoon caught Jack's eye. He saw a white head begin to emerge from the
water. He took aim with the Benelli but hesitated. He wasn't sure why. Maybe
because he felt responsible. Maybe if he'd let her down a little more easily
she wouldn't have attacked him, then Anya. Maybe something about her pathetic
desire to fit in touched him. Or maybe he couldn't bring himself to blow holes
in a young woman, no matter how sick and twisted she was.
Whatever the reason, he
dropped the shotgun, grabbed the cenote thing by the roots of its remaining
wings, and lifted it. It looked heavy but he found it surprisingly light. It
writhed in his grasp, trying to twist around and gouge him with those diamond
teeth, but its carapace limited its agility.
Jack leaped off the bank and
into the water.
"Jack!" he heard
his father cry. "What in God's name are you doing?"
Jack didn't answer. Holding
the cenote thing high, he splashed toward where Semelee was emerging from the
water. He noticed she was holding two shells over her eyes.
The shells-that was what
she'd wanted them for. Somehow they let her control these things.
And I helped complete her
set.
He also noticed the other
winged things rising from their feasts on the decks of the two boats and
heading his way. He put everything he had into forcing himself through the
water.
When he reached her he
grabbed the back of her hair. He yanked downward, hard, stretching her throat,
and held the crystalline teeth of the cenote thing inches from her skin. The
twisting, gnashing jaws reminded him of a wood router.
"Drop the shells! Drop
them now, Semelee, or this thing gets a free lunch! Don't think I'm bluffing!
You may have been right about me not shooting Luke the other day, but this is
different. After what you've pulled in the last twenty-four hours, I'm more
than ready for payback."
"Okay, okay," she
said, but kept the shells over her eyes. "Just let me send the chew wasps
back to the sinkhole."
Chew wasps...a perfect name.
"You do that."
The approaching chew wasps
veered away and headed for the cenote, its lights faintly visible through the
rain. Jack watched them fade into the mist, then, with his free hand, pulled
Semelee's hands away from her face. He hadn't forgotten about Dora. He took her
by the upper arm and guided her toward the bank.
As Jack pulled her up on
land, he heard Dad call his name. He glanced over and saw him pointing toward
the lagoon.
"Who or what isthat
?"
Jack turned and stared. He
saw nothing at first, then the lightning flashed and he spotted a man in a suit
standing at the center of the lagoon. Notin the lagoon-onit. No, not just
standing on the water, walking on it. His stride was long and purposeful,
moving him along at a good pace, yet without the slightest hint of hurry.
Jack tossed the partially
dewinged chew wasp into the lagoon where it sank like a mob hit. He squinted
through the storm. Couldn't make out the man's features, but as he neared, Jack
noticed that he seemed to be moving in a bubble-not something with a membrane,
simply an area around him, a dry area. The rain driving at him from all
directions didn't touch him. And it didn't sluice away, it simply...went away.
"Oh, God!" Semelee
cried, cringing against Jack. "It's Jesus come to get me for my
sins!"
"You've got a lot of
things to answer for, but I don't think that's Jesus."
Not unless he's taken to
wearing Armani, Jack thought.
Of course he hadn't a clue
as to the designer-if an Armani suit introduced itself, he'd have to ask it for
ID-but it looked expensive, maybe silk, charcoal gray, perfectly tailored, worn
over a black shirt buttoned to the collar. Very Euro, this water strider.
When the man moved close
enough for Jack to make out his face, he felt his blood congeal. He knew that
face, that supercilious expression. He raised the Benelli and roared.
"Roma!"
Jack held him accountable
for Kate's death-at least indirectly-and for a lot of other things that had
gone wrong in his life since they'd met at that conspiracy convention last
spring. He'd called himself Sal Roma then. Who knew what he was calling himself
now. He'd tried to kill Jack then and almost succeeded. Either he or the
Otherness or the two in league had tried to kill Gia and their baby just last
month. Now it was payback time. No hesitation-he wasn't sighting down on a
waifish woman, this was the "Adversary" Anya had mentioned, the One
whose True Name she refused to speak.
"goodbye, whoever you
are," he whispered, and pulled the trigger.
Or tried to. It wouldn't
budge. Jammed!
And then Roma glanced at him
and Jack felt himself lifted through the air and slammed back against a palm
trunk. The pain of the impact on his spine blew all the air out of him and
blurred his vision for a few heartbeats. His knees turned to jelly and he slid
earthward to end up sitting in the mud, propped against the palm.
"Jack!" he heard
his father cry from what seemed like the end of a long hallway. "Jack, are
you all-?"
Jack's vision cleared in
time to see his father tumble back into the brush and disappear from view.
He wanted to shout to him
but his voice wouldn't work.
Fear spiked his chest. Was
Dad hurt? Was he even alive?
Jack tried to get to his
feet but couldn't move. For a panicky instant he thought he was paralyzed from
a broken spine, then realized that something was holding him in place,
something he couldn't see or feel but powerful enough to press on him so effectively
that all he could do was breathe. He tried to shout to Roma but couldn't do
even that. He was at Roma's mercy.
But Roma didn't seem
interested in him, didn't even glance toward Jack as he casually stepped onto
the bank to stand not two feet away, facing Semelee.
Semelee cringed back as he
stared at her.
"So," Roma said.
Jack heard him clearly. The rain and wind seemed to be easing up, although
lightning still flashed all around them. "You're the one who's trying to
usurp my name."
"Name? What name?"
"You know...the one
that doesn't belong to you."
"You mean Rasalom? It
does belong to me.I'm Rasalom."
He slapped her face. The
move was so quick Jack would have wondered what had happened if not for the sound
of flesh hitting flesh, and the sight of Semelee staggering back a step as her
face jerked to the right. Jack could almost feel the sting.
And then it hit him-Rasalom.
That was the fuck's True Name.
"Never," Rasalom
said softly, with no show of emotion,"ever refer to yourself by my
name."
"Who says it'syour
name?" Semelee cried, baring her teeth.
Jack had to hand it to
her-she wasn't cowed. And the way she took the blow...clearly she'd been
slapped around before.
"I do," Roma said
softly. "And the only reason I haven't pulled your limbs and head from
your torso is that you somehow-through pure dumb luck, I'm sure-managed to find
a way to kill the Lady. For that I am in your debt. But don't press your luck,
little girl."
"Ain't luck," she
said. "And I ain't no little girl! I was down in that hole, in the lights,
and I heard the voices. They told me I was the One and that my name was
Rasalom."
He slapped her again,
harder, and this time she went down. She lay in the mud, rubbing her reddened
cheek. A few minutes ago the rain might have soothed it, but it was clearly
easing up.
"This is your last
warning," he said. "You are not the One. What you heard was talk
aboutme , not you."
"No!" she
screamed, struggling to her feet and backing away. "I'm the One, and my
name is Rasalom! Rasalom-Rasalom-Rasalom!" She raised the shells and
pressed them over her eyes. "And now you're gonna pay. Nobody pushes me
around anymore!Nobody!"
Jack knew what was coming
and found himself rooting for her.
Enemy of my enemy...
He looked over toward the
cenote and saw half a dozen chew wasps rising from the opening. He guessed they
hadn't been too far down.
Oh, yes...Rasalom was in for
one messy, bloody, and-Jack hoped-painful death. He was glad for a front row
seat.
The wasps arranged
themselves in V formation and charged, homing in on Rasalom.
Jack braced himself. This
was going to be ugly, but he wanted to watch every second of it.
Rasalom remained facing
Semelee, his back to the cenote. When the wasps were almost upon him, Rasalom
gestured with his left hand-little more than a wrist-flick, like a diner
signaling a waiter that the amount in the wineglass was quite sufficient, thank
you-and they stopped, hovering around him like bees guarding a hive.
Jack heard a low-pitched
screech from Semelee. Her teeth were clenched and bared as she struggled for
control of the chew wasps. Jack could tell by the vaguely amused twist of Rasalom's
lips that he was enjoying the struggle and that she didn't have a chance.
Finally he seemed to tire of
the game. Another flick of his hand and the wasps were on her like ants on a
sugar cube. She dropped her shells and tried to bat them away but they attacked
from all sides and she went down in sprays of red, kicking, thrashing,
writhing. Her screams as they tore her flesh were awful to hear. Jack couldn't
help wonder if Anya had wailed like that.
Jack looked away, toward
Rasalom, and almost worse than the screams was the avid look on his face as he
stood over her and watched her death agonies.
If he could move an arm,
just one arm, he could pull out one of the grenades still clipped to his belt
and frag this bastard. But his body wouldn't respond.
As soon as Semelee's
screaming died away in a gurgling moan, Rasalom seemed to lose interest. He
sauntered to where Jack sat propped against the tree trunk and stood over him.
Now it's my turn, he thought
as his bladder clenched.
He hoped he didn't go out
screaming like Semelee, but the pain of being eaten alive had to be...his
imagination failed him.
The rain died to a drizzle
and the sky lightened fractionally as Rasalom stared down at him. Again Jack
tried to speak but his voice was locked.
Then he gave Jack's foot a
dismissive kick.
"My instincts tell me
to kill you now, that you'll be a stone upon my path. But I can't see you ever
being too much of a stone for me to kick aside any time I wish. Besides,
killing you now might be something of a favor. It would spare you so much pain
in the months to come. And why should I do you a favor? Why should I spare you
that pain? I don't want you to miss one iota of what is coming your way."
The words drove a cold spike
through Jack.
...so much pain in the
months to come...
What did that mean? What was
going to cause it? And how did he know? Jack wanted to shout the questions but
couldn't even whisper.
He struggled to move. He
wanted at this smug son of a bitch, wanted to smash his jaw and rip out his
tongue.
Rasalom glanced back to
where Semelee had been. A partially flayed skull and a twisted mass of
blood-matted white hair were all that remained of her. The chew wasps milling
above her seemed confused; two of them bumped in midair and started to fight.
Was it the increasing light? Was that what was bothering them?
Rasalom made another of his
little gestures and the wasps darted for the cenote. He pointed toward what was
left of Semelee.
"Physical pain is mere
sustenance. But a strong man slowly battered into despair and
hopelessness...that is a delicacy. In your case, it might even approach
ecstasy. I don't want to deprive myself of that." He frowned. "Of
course there's always the risk that what's coming will only make you stronger.
But it's a gamble I'm willing to take. So for now, you live on. But as soon as
you stop amusing me..."
He let the words hang as he
turned and stepped off the bank onto the water.
As Rasalom strode away, Jack
felt the pressure against him ease, but slowly. He wasn't able to regain his
feet until Rasalom was out of sight. His first urge was to go after him, but
that dissolved in a blast of anxiety about his father. He rushed over to where
he'd last seen him and found him sprawled in a clump of ferns, his legs and
arms splayed in all directions.
Jack rushed toward him.
"Dad!"
Was this the sort of pain
Rasalom was talking about? He'd lost Kate, now he was going to lose his father?
But as Jack reached him, he
moved.
13
Tom sat up and ran his hands over his arms and legs.
I can move! I can feel!
Dear God, I thought-
He looked up and saw Jack
skid to a stop before him.
"Dad-you okay?"
"I thought I'd had a
stroke! One moment I was standing by that tree. I saw you fly backwards, then
the next thing I knew I was on my back and couldn't speak or move a
finger."
Jack reached a hand down to
him. "Can you get up?"
Tom let his son help him to
his feet. He brushed himself off and looked around. He felt shaky and a little
weak. Well, why not? He was seventy-one and had just experienced the firefight
of his life. He'd been in battle before, but against other men, other soldiers.
This time...
"Jack! What happened
here? Who was that? Was he really walking on water?"
"That's what it looked
like."
Jack's eyes were flat. Not
hard and cold like before when he looked like murder personified, but Tom sensed
that he'd put up a wall.
"What's going on, Jack?
A girl who can control snakes and birds and even flying things from hell-and
I'm sure that sinkhole goes straight to hell-and a guy who walks on
water...what's happening to the world?"
"Nothing that hasn't
been going on for a long, long time. Nothing's changed except you got a peek
behind the curtain."
"What curtain?"
What was he talking about?
Had Jack snapped under the stress of what he'd been through...or had he been
through something like this before...something even worse?
"It's over, Dad."
"What's over?"
"Semelee, the chew
wasps, the guy on the water-"
"But you knew him. You
called him by name-Roma, wasn't it?"
"Just let it go, Dad.
Tuck it away and forget about it. It's over." He looked up. "Even
Hurricane Elvis is over."
Tom realized then that it
had stopped raining. He could still hear the rumble of thunder, but the wind
had died, leaving the air deathly still. He followed Jack's gaze, and through
the partially denuded tree branches he saw clear sky, light blue, tinged with
orange from the sinking sun.
Over...for a while there
he'd thought the storm would never end.
He looked around...at the
fallen palms and cypresses, at the slowly sinking houseboats canted in the
leaf-and debris-strewn water, at their red decks and the mutilated bodies
littering them like jack straws.
Tom's mouth went dry.
"Did we do that?"
"Some of it." He
didn't seem the least bit fazed. "We can take credit for the holes in the
hulls and some of the blood, but Semelee bears the freight for the rest. She's
the one who called those chew wasps out of the cenote and lost control of them.
Good thing too. Otherwise they'd be standing here looking at what was left of
us."
Jack picked up one of the
shotguns and hurled it far out into the lagoon.
"What-?"
"Evidence."
The second shotgun followed
the first. He saw Jack pull the pistol from his belt, look at it, then tuck it
back in.
Tom glanced once more at the
carnage on the boat decks, then looked again. Had one of the bodies moved?
"I think someone's
still alive out there."
"Probably not for
long."
"Do you think we
should-?"
Jack turned on him.
"You've got to be kidding. A few moments ago they were trying to kill
us."
"In the Corps we always
treated enemy wounded."
"This isn't the Corps,
and this isn't war. This is a street fight that just happened to take place
where there aren't any streets." His face twisted, almost into a snarl.
"What do you think we're going to do? Paddle a couple of them back and lug
them to a hospital? How do you explain their wounds? How do you explain the
double-ought buckshot in their hides? In this system, you'll wind up behind
bars while they lounge around a hospital. And when they're all fixed up, some
ambulance chaser will hook up with them and file civil suits to clean you out
of everything you own, every penny you've saved up your whole life."
Tom was seeing another side
of Jack and wasn't sure he liked this one.
"But-"
"But nothing!"
He turned and stomped off to
one of the old huts and returned a moment later with something dangling from
his hand. He stopped before Tom and held it up.
"See this?"
It was rectangular and
looked a little like parchment, but it was too supple for that. It was
patterned with crisscrossing scars and round, punctate depressions the size of
a pencil eraser. When Tom realized what it was he took an involuntary step
back.
"Right," Jack
said. "This is all they left of Anya, and then they hung it up to cure.
Now tell me how much you want to risk to help one of those bastards."
Tom felt a rising fury.
Anya...what they'd done to Anya...a part of him wanted to paddle out there and
finish off any survivors. But he couldn't allow himself to step over that line.
He shook his head.
"Nothing. They're on they're own."
"Damn right."
Jack stared at the grisly
remnant in his hands, then looked around. He didn't seem to know what to do
with it. He appeared to come to a decision as he rolled up the skin and tucked
it inside his shirt.
"What are you going to
do with that?"
"It's all that's left
of her. I think she deserves some sort of burial ceremony, don't you?"
Here was still another side
of Jack. Tom sensed it could be a living nightmare to be his son's enemy, but a
very good thing to be his friend.
He nodded. "Most
definitely. Now that the storm's over, we'll take her home and find a place to
lay her to rest."
Jack looked up at the sky.
"Good thing it ended when it did. I thought we were in for a much longer
blow."
"So did I."
Then an awful thought struck
him. He turned and started pushing through the ferns and brush.
"Where are you
going?" Jack called from behind him.
"To high ground. I want
the highest point on this hummock."
It wasn't far-these islands
in the saw grass sea weren't all that large. Just a few minutes walk and he was
standing atop the crest of the hummock.
But he still didn't have the
view he needed. He hurried to a nearby live oak that somehow had weathered the
storm intact. He stretched for the lowest branch but couldn't reach it.
"Give me a boost,"
he said to Jack, who had followed him.
"What do you think
you're doing?"
"Just help me up, damn
it. I need to see."
He was sorry for the sharp
tone, but he was worried. He crawled onto the limb, then, hanging on to a
nearby branch, straightened until he was standing. When he saw the wall of
cloud and rain less than a mile away to the west, his fears were confirmed.
"Jack, the hurricane
isn't over. We're in its eye. It's going to hit us again. Maybe even worse than
what we've been through. We've got to-oh, hell!"
"What?" Jack said
from below.
Tom watched a pale funnel
cloud skating back and forth inside the edge of the onrushing eye wall. Another
snaked down a short way north of the first.
"Tornadoes!" He
turned and slid down the trunk. "We have to get off this hummock!"
"Tornadoes?" As
soon as Tom landed on the ground, Jack started climbing. "I've always
wanted to see a tornado." He reached the limb and peered west. "I'll
be damned. Three of them."
"Three? There were only
two before! Get down from there and get moving!"
Jack stared a few heartbeats
longer, then joined Tom on the ground.
Jack led the way back to the
lagoon on a run. As they passed the sinkhole, Tom slowed and peered into the
depths. The lights had faded to a dim glow and the lagoon had risen to the
level where water was beginning to trickle over the edge.
"This thing should be
sealed up," he said. "Maybe after all this is over we should come
back and-"
Jack spoke over his
shoulder. "Don't worry about it. It's closing itself down until the
spring. Keep moving."
Closing itself down...how
could he know that?
Tom was winded, with a dull
ache squeezing his chest by the time they reached the bank. He hunched over,
hands on knees, panting while Jack inspected the clan's boats. He pointed to a
water-filled flat-bottom dinghy at the edge of the lagoon withChicken-ship
across its stern.
"This one's got a
bigger motor than the canoe. We'll make better time. Help me tip it up to get
rid of this water." He stared at him. "You okay?"
"Yeah," Tom said.
"Just not conditioned for this."
Tipping a boat was the last
thing Tom felt like doing right now, but he didn't think Jack could handle it
alone. Jack pulled off his poncho and positioned himself at the aft end of the
starboard side. As Tom moved to join him, something splashed near Jack's foot.
Tom saw him jump and scramble away from the water.
Tom too backed away when he
saw what was crawling up the bank. He'd heard mention of a two-headed snapping
turtle, and hadn't quite believed it, but here it was-and much larger than he
would have imagined. The shell had to be at least four feet long. It's gaping
hooked jaws closed with loud clacks and they snapped at Jack.
Jack yanked a grenade from
his belt, pulled the pin, and popped the clip.
"This is for
Carl," he said, and lobbed it toward the creature.
Tom stood paralyzed for a
moment. Carl...dear God, he'd all but forgotten about poor Carl...
He saw the right head snatch
the grenade on the fly and swallow it, then Jack was rushing him, pushing him
to the ground.
"Down!"
Tom hit the mud and covered
his head with his hands. The explosion was muffled but he could still feel the
impact through the ground. And then bloody turtle meat and bits of shell began
to rain around them.
When it stopped, Jack helped
him to his feet, then stepped back to the boat. The remains of the snapper were
sinking into the water, trailing a red cloud. Jack froze, then hurried to the
stern.
"Christ! Can't we get a
break here?"
"What's wrong?"
"The explosion sheared
off the propeller!" He kicked the side of the boat. "Damn! Okay.
Looks like it's the canoe."
They hurried along the bank
to where they'd left it. Jack slipped into the rear and started yanking on the
little motor's pull cord. After a couple of dozen quick pulls, he spewed a
string of curses and gave up. The motor hadn't even coughed.
"Won't start. Who knows
what was blown or washed into it during the storm. We'll have to power it
ourselves."
"Jack..." Tom
hated to admit it, but he was all in. "I don't know if I can."
Jack stared at him a moment,
then said, "It's okay, Dad. I'll handle it. You take the rear, maybe use
the outboard as a rudder while I paddle us out of here."
Feeling unsteady, Tom
stepped into the canoe and dropped into the rear seat. His chest felt funny, as
if his heart was flailing wildly against his sternum. The chaotic rhythm left
him drained. But not too drained to grab the tiller of the motor as Jack began
paddling.
The canoe nosed out of the
lagoon and soon they were gliding along the swollen channel. They hadn't gone
too far before the light began to die as the clouds closed in again. Then the
wind and rain returned with a vengeance.
Tom still wore his poncho
but Jack had shed his a while back. His T-shirt was plastered to his skin and
Tom watched the play of muscles across his son's back as he worked the paddle.
Not bulky steroidal clumps, but sleek efficient bands, close to the skin. He
hadn't noticed Jack's muscles till now. Where had they come from? He'd been
such a skinny kid, even in college. Now...well, he reminded Tom of a few guys
he'd known in the service, lean, quiet types who didn't look like much until
someone tried to push them around. He'd seen a guy built like Jack take down
someone twice his size.
He'd been angry with Jack
all these years for disappearing, and never more angry than when he didn't show
up for Kate's funeral. But all that seemed ancient history now. Despite Jack's
secretiveness, his reclusiveness, his quirky behavior, Tom realized he loved,
even admired the strange, enigmatic man his son had grown into. He sensed a
strength, a resolve, a simple decency about him. He'd worried for so long that he
must have made terrible mistakes raising Jack-why else would he turn his back
on his family the way he had?-but now he sensed that maybe he'd done all right.
Not that anyone should take full credit or full blame for how another person
turns out; everyone makes their own choices. But as a parent he had to think
he'd hadsome input.
More than anything he wanted
Jack to survive this storm. He didn't care about himself so much, though of
course he wasn't looking to die, but he sensed somehow that it was important
for Jack to live-not simply important to his father, but for other, larger
reasons. He couldn't pinpoint what those were; they hovered just out of reach,
but they were there. Somewhere along the way, Jack was going tomatter .
Tom's heart had resumed a
more sedate rhythm but it jumped again as a lightning bolt speared the saw
grass ahead of them. He looked around in the near-night darkness. They were out
in the open, begging to be struck by lightning; but staying among the trees of
the hummock, especially with this wind and tornadoes, seemed even riskier.
They rounded a bend in the
channel and the canoe kicked ahead as the wind roared from behind. Tom spread
his flapping poncho to give the wind something more to blow against. It worked.
The canoe picked up speed.
He was feeling pretty proud
of himself until another bolt of lightning lit up a funnel cloud reaching for
the ground a few hundred yards to his left. It hadn't touched down, which meant
it wasn't-
Another flash showed it on
the ground, kicking up mud and grass and water. It was now officially a
tornado.
He leaned forward and tapped
Jack on the shoulder. "Look left!"
Jack did so, and of course
the lightning chose just that moment to hold off; but then a double flash lit
up the funnel, whiter than before, and closer. It was coming this way.
"Fuck!" Jack
shouted and started paddling even harder.
Fuck...Tom had rarely if
ever used the word since leaving the Marines. He didn't believe it belonged
within the walls of a family home, and certainly not in mixed company. But
looking at that swirling, swaying mass of wind and debris heading their
way...fuck.
Yes, fuck indeed.
During storms on trips to
the Keys, he'd witness an occasional waterspout-long, pale, wispy, short-lived
things more beautiful than threatening. Even though there was plenty of water
about, this thing to the left wasn't a waterspout, nor was it one of those
quarter-mile-wide monsters the Weather Channel liked to show. Its base seemed
to be only fifty feet or so across-
Only?Tom thought. What am I
thinking? That thing is plenty big enough to kill us both.
He tried to gauge its
intensity. He knew about the Fujita scale-he'd learned a few things during all
those hours in front of the Weather Channel-and hoped this one didn't clock in
at more than an F2. They wouldn't survive a direct hit by an F2, but they might
handle a close encounter. If they wound up near anything higher up the scale,
that would be it.
No matter what its scale,
Tom prayed it would head in the other direction.
He pulled a paddle from the
sloshing bottom of the canoe and did what he could to speed the boat along. He
kept glancing to his left. He could hear a growing roar-that was the damn
tornado getting closer, running on an erratic diagonal that was sure to
intersect their course. At least that was how it looked. The way it was weaving
back and forth made avoidance a crap shoot.
The big question: Stay in
the boat or get out? In the boat seemed worse than being in a trailer. They
were too exposed; if that funnel came even close, flying debris could cut them
to shreds. But to get out...
Jack was looking around too.
"Let's dump the
boat!" he shouted over the growing roar.
"And go where?"
He pointed to the right.
"I saw something over there."
Tom squinted through the
rain and darkness. A flash revealed the dark splotch of a willow thicket
sitting like an island in the saw grass sea. The willows tended to be small in
these thickets, little more than a dozen feet tall. They'd provide some shelter,
something to hold on to without worrying it would crush them if it toppled
over.
A glance in the opposite
direction showed the tornado even closer.
"Let's do it!" Tom
shouted.
"What about
gators?"
"If they're smart
they're on the bottom of the deepest channel they can find."
He didn't mention snakes. He
had no idea what snakes did in weather like this. He hoped they didn't head for
higher ground...like hummocks and thickets...
Jack jumped out of the
canoe, Tom followed. The water was thigh high in the channel. Tom slipped only
once climbing the slope to the saw grass where the water was only ankle deep.
Jack pulled the canoe up behind him and left it on its side in the grass.
Lightning lit their way as
they sloshed toward the thicket, Jack in the lead, while the roar of the
twister grew behind them...no, not behind them...to the left...
A flash revealed the
swaying, writhing funnel less than a hundred yards away, flanking them. Tom
gasped for breath as his heart writhed like the twister. How had it caught up
so fast? Another flash showed it veering this way. Almost seemed as if it was
chasing them, homing in on them. But that was ridiculous.
Then again, after all he'd
seen today...
"Crawl in here!"
Jack shouted as they reached the thicket. His voice was barely audible over the
roar of the onrushing funnel. Tom saw that he was holding aside a patch of
underbrush. "Find a trunk and hang on!"
Tom dropped to his hands and
knees as he ducked into the leafy mesh, feeling ahead of him in the dark until
he found a sturdy-feeling trunk maybe six inches across.
"You take this
one!" he shouted to Jack who was close behind. "I'll take the
next."
He heard a garbled protest
from Jack but kept moving. Half a dozen feet farther on he found another, more
slender trunk, maybe half the size of the first. He dropped prone and wrapped
his arms around it. His lungs struggled for air. God, it was good to lie still.
He felt his heart ramming at his chest wall as he lay in the mud.
"You okay, Jack?"
he shouted. He could barely hear himself above the tornado's roar.
"Jack?"
That roar...it had to be at
least an F2...any higher, they were goners.
Frantic, he looked around
for Jack and saw nothing but darkness. And then the tree began to shake and the
ground to tremble; he ducked his head against the wind and the saw grass blades
whistling through the underbrush like knives.
Thank God they weren't
trying to weather this back at the lagoon. The flying debris from the boats and
the huts would be lethal. Here it was only grass and mud and water. Not that
any of that would matter if the funnel passed directly over them.
The wind scythed at him from
all angles as he clung to the trunk. He could hear the twister grinding through
the saw grass on the far edge of the thicket, roaring like a freight train-he'd
always heard tornado survivors describe the sound that way, and now he knew it
was true...like a train...in a tunnel...
Tom felt the underbrush
around him being twisted and yanked from the mud. And then his tree started to
tilt, first to the left, then the right, then-
Dear God, it was coming out
of the ground, ripping free of the mud, rising into the air!
Tom had to let go or rise
with it. As he released his grip the willow ripped free with an agonizedcrunch
and sailed off. He tried to cling to the rootlets left in the hole but the
deluge of water made them slick and they slipped through his fingers. Then he
felt his legs lift as he was pulled backward. He clutched for grass or weeds or
ferns-anything!-but they came free in his grasp. His body angled off the ground
and he clawed at mud that had no more consistency than beef stew. He was losing
his last contact with the ground when he felt a hand grab his right ankle and
yank him down.
Jack!
Another set of fingers wound
around his left ankle and started hauling him backward. He heard Jack's enraged
voice shouting above the storm.
"You got away with this
once, but not again. No fucking way!"
Who was he talking to? The
twister? But he'd said "again." Tom doubted Jack had ever even seen a
twister, let alone dealt with one. Who, then?
He'd worry about that later.
Right now he wanted to know how Jack was hanging on. If both hands were holding
Tom, who was holding Jack?
He felt one of Jack's hands
grab his belt and haul him farther back. Tom craned his neck to look over his
shoulder and saw that Jack had locked his legs around a willow trunk. He kept
dragging Tom back until he could wrap his arms around the larger tree.
And with that...the roaring
began to fade. After brushing the thicket, the twister was moving on, probably
carving a new channel through the saw grass as it traveled.
Jack rolled away from the
tree and lay on his back.
"Thought I was going to
lose you there, Dad."
As his heart regained a
normal rhythm, Tom watched Jack lie there with closed eyes as rain pounded his
face.
"I thought I was a
goner too. Thanks."
"De nada."
Nothing? No, it wasn't
nothing. It was something...something very special. He owed his life to Jack.
He couldn't think of anyone
he'd more like to be indebted to.
Tom swallowed the lump in
his throat. "Come on. Let's see if we can find that canoe and get to
someplace dry."
Tuesday
1
"I've decided to move back north," Dad said as
Jack packed his duffel bag for the trip home.
Jack studied his face, still
bruised from the accident, and weathered from the storm. "You're sure
about that?"
Dad nodded. "Very. I'll
never be able to look at Anya's house without remembering what...what we saw
there...what happened to her. And I can't see me ever looking out my front door
at the Everglades without thinking of the other night...all that blood spilled,
especially Carl's...and that sinkhole and the things that came out of it. And
the storm, that tornado..." He shook his head. "We damn near died out
there."
"But we didn't,"
Jack told him. "That's all that counts."
It hadn't been easy getting
back. The canoe had been far enough from the twister to come through in one
piece, but the subsequent battle through the storm had been an ordeal. With the
smaller channels filling up, and no way to judge east or west, Jack had become
disoriented and made a few wrong turns. It took nearly two hours of paddling
before they arrived at the air-boat dock and gratefully collapsed in the
shelter of the car.
Monday had been spent
recuperating. Muscles Jack didn't even know he had protested every time he
moved. The groundsmen-sans Carl-were out in force cleaning up the mess left by
the storm. They must have seen Anya's shredded screen door but probably attributed
it to the storm.
Late in the afternoon, after
the crews had finished for the day and no one was about, Jack and his father
buried Anya's remains in her garden, among the plants she'd loved. Since she
kept pretty much to herself, no one had discovered yet that she was missing.
Jack dug a two-foot hole in
the wet soil-deeper than any dog or coon would go-and then Dad reverently
placed the quarter-folded skin within. He'd chosen not to wrap it in anything.
Better to let it decompose quickly and recycle its nutrients back to her
plants.
And then a quiet night of
mourning, Dad looking for answers to a long list of questions, Jack doing his
best not to answer them. Dad didn't need to know more than he already did and,
despite what he'd been through, probably wouldn't accept the truth as Jack
understood it. So Jack told him only what he'd gleaned from Anya and let him
assume that the rest of the answers had died with her. It never occurred to
either of them to turn on the Monday night football game.
"Besides," Dad was
saying on this bright morning, "what am I doing down here while my sons
and all my grandchildren are up north? It makes no sense. I don't know what I
was thinking."
Maybe you weren't thinking,
Jack thought. Maybe you were being manipulated. Maybe everything that's
happened down here was part of a plan-a plan that, thanks to Anya, didn't go
quite the way it was supposed to.
And then again, maybe not.
But with the Otherness so
obviously involved, Jack couldn't help but think that his father had been
scheduled to die last Tuesday morning.
"Maybe I'll come south
for just a month or two a year," Dad went on, "say February and
March. Statistics say that an American male who reaches age sixty-five can
expect to live another sixteen years. That leaves me ten more. Makes no sense
to spend them fifteen hundred miles from the most important people in my
life."
"You're right. It
doesn't."
Jack had a feeling he'd
better watch over his father. He was sure the Otherness wasn't through with him
yet. Rasalom's words kept haunting him:
...a strong man slowly
battered into despair and hopelessness...that is a delicacy. In your case, it
might even approach ecstasy...
How was this battering into
despair and hopelessness going to happen? By destroying everyone he cared
about?
He was glad his father would
be closer to home, but right now he wanted to get back to Gia and Vicky. Worry
for them was a knife point in his back, urging him home. And he had to get
working on a way to become a citizen before March, when the baby was due.
Yesterday he'd overnighted
the Ruger back to one of his mail drops. He'd pick it up after it was forwarded
to another drop. All he had to do now was pack up his clothes and head for the
airport.
The phone rang.
"That should be the
sales office," Dad said. "I phoned them first thing this morning
about putting the place on the market."
As he left, Jack reminded
himself to check out Blagden & Sons once he got home. See if he could find
out why they wanted that sand from the cenote. He had a feeling it wasn't for
mixing concrete for back porches.
He scooped the last of his
things out of the bureau and froze: The rectangle of Anya's skin lay in the
bottom of the drawer.
His mouth went dry. This
couldn't be. They'd buried it yesterday, yet here it was, without a speck of
dirt.
Jack walked out to the main
room where his father was discussing prices and commissions with the sales
office; he went directly to the back porch and grabbed the shovel he used
yesterday. He headed for Anya's garden.
The burial spot was just as
they'd left it. Jack dug into the loose soil and quickly reached the two-foot
level.
No skin.
He dug down another six
inches-he knew he hadn't gone this deep yesterday-and still nothing but dirt.
Anya's skin was gone.
No, wait, not gone. It was
lying in a drawer in his Dad's guest bedroom. But how...?
Jack didn't waste time with
unanswerable questions-how it had gotten out of the hole and into the house,
why it was there. Either he'd find out later or he wouldn't.
He quickly refilled the hole
and hurried back to the house. Dad was still on the phone. He looked up with a
questioning expression as Jack passed but Jack waved him off. Back in the room
he went directly to the bureau and froze again. Now the drawer was empty.
What the hell?
He turned and saw a now
familiar pattern through the open top of his duffel bag. He stretched the
zippered mouth and stared.
There it lay. Apparently
Anya, or at least this piece of her, wanted to go home with him.
Jack sighed. Again, he
wouldn't ask why, he'd just go with the flow and trust that sooner or later
this would all make sense.
He covered the skin with his
remaining clothes and zipped the bag closed.
All right, Anya, he thought.
You want to come along, be my guest.
He lifted the bag and headed
for the front room. Dad hung up as he entered.
"Well, just a few
papers to sign and the place is officially on the market."
"Great. I hear they've
got people lined up to get in here, so it shouldn't take long."
"Yeah."
A silence grew between them.
Jack knew he had to go, but he was reluctant to leave his father here alone.
Finally Dad said, "It's
been wonderful getting to know you, Jack. There's so much about you I still
don't know, but what I've learned...I'm surprised, but pleasantly so."
"You're pretty full of
surprises yourself."
"But you know all mine
now. I get the feeling-no, Iknow you've still got quite a few left."
Here we go. "Probably
not as many as you think. But who knows what you'll find out once you get back
north?"
Dad nodded. "Right. Who
knows?"
As if there'd been some
unspoken signal, they embraced.
"Good to have you back,
son," his father whispered. "Really, really good."
They broke the clinch, but
still gripped each other's arms.
"Good to know the real
you, Dad. You can take my back any time." He broke free and grabbed his
duffel. "See you back home."
"Call me when you get
in."
"You're kidding,
right?"
"No. I've always
worried about you, but after what I've learned about you down here, I'll
really, really worry about you."
Jack laughed as he pushed
through the door and headed for the car and the airport and the plane home to
Gia and Vicky.
www.repairmanjack.com
Afterword
South Floridians will know I played fast and loose with
some of the geography inGateways . Joanie's Blue Crab Café is not on US 1, but
on the other side of the state, on Route 41 in Ochopee. But the crab cakes and
softshell crab sandwiches are just as good as I described. While researching
the Glades I'd often drive twenty or thirty miles out of my way to grab a bite
and an Ybor Gold at Joanie's.
As for Gator Country FM
101.9, it's hard to pull in if you're on US 1, but travel a little ways west
and there it is. A good station for modern country and it kept me company
during the drives.
Novaton may seem like
Homestead, but it's an amalgam of a number of towns I stayed in during my
research sorties.
One thing I did not make up
or overstate is the shameful neglect, mismanagement, and outright abuse
suffered by the Everglades during the twentieth century. It's a fragile,
fascinating environment, sui generis, that's been damn near ruined by rampant
overdevelopment. There's lots of talk lately of restoring the Everglades; let's
hope the folks talking the talk will walk the walk before it's too late.
F. Paul Wilson
The Jersey Shore
March, 2003
www.repairmanjack.com