Contents
Title Page
Dedication
Epigraph
In Preparation
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
Chapter 16
Chapter 17
In Motion
Chapter 18
Chapter 19
Chapter 20
Chapter 21
Chapter 22
Chapter 23
Chapter 24
Chapter 25
All the Players in Their Places
Chapter 26
Chapter 27
Chapter 28
Chapter 29
Chapter 30
Chapter 31
Chapter 32
Chapter 33
Chapter 34
Chapter 35
Chapter 36
Chapter 37
Beat the Clock
Chapter 38
Chapter 39
Chapter 40
Chapter 41
Chapter 42
All the Chickens Come Home to Roost
Chapter 43
Chapter 44
About the Author
Also by Joe R. Lansdale
Copyright
For Keith, Scoop Dog
Life is full of holes. The trick is to try to live between them.
—Jerzy Fitzgerald
In Preparation
1
When you grow up in a place, especially if your childhood is a good one, you fail to notice a lot of the nasty things that creep beneath the surface and wriggle about like hungry worms in rotten flesh. But they’re there. Sometimes you have to dig to discover them, or slant your head in just the right direction to see them. But they’re there all right, and the things that wriggle can include blackmail, mutilation and murder. And I can vouch firsthand that this is true.
But the day I arrived back in town there was no evidence of anything wriggling under the surface or anywhere else, unless you count my head, which seemed to be wriggling a lot. I was coming off a lowball drunk and felt as if someone had borrowed my skull to bowl a few frames.
As I drove through Camp Rapture, over the railroad tracks and past the dog food factory, I told myself I would never drink again. But I had told myself that before.
It was a bright day, the sunlight like a burst egg yolk running all over the sidewalk and through the yards, almost snuffing out the grass with its heated glory, and causing everything to be warm and appear fresh, even the houses on the poor side of town from which ancient coats of basic white peeled like stripping sunburn.
I tooled along with my eyes squinted to keep out some of the summer light, eased by Gabby’s veterinarian office and tried not to rubberneck too much, and passed on. I finally drove up to the Camp Rapture Report, got out and stood by my aging car and looked around and hoped maybe this time things were going to go better.
Night before, I had driven over from Houston after leaving Hootie Hoot, Oklahoma, and my crazy Iraq war buddy, Booger, but only got as far as a bar, and later a motel on the outskirts of town, where I drank myself into a stupor in front of the TV set, watching who knows what. For all I cared it could have been a program on tractor repair or how to give yourself a lobotomy.
Next morning, I awoke feeling like something had died in my mouth and something else had crawled up my ass. I showered and brushed the dead thing out of my mouth and decided to live with whatever was up my ass, and drove to my scheduled interview for a possible position on the Camp Rapture Report.
Standing there beside my car, sweating from the late summer heat like a great ape in an argyle sweater, I took in a big breath of hot air. I checked to make sure my zipper was up, then examined the bottoms of my shoes for dog crap, just in case. I went along the sidewalk, strolled past the bee-laden, flowered shrubbery, the smell of which made my stomach roil, and went inside.
The Report looked pretty old-fashioned. Like a place where male reporters ought to wear fedoras with press cards in the hatbands and the female reporters ought to chew gum and talk snappy dialogue through bright red lipstick.
At the front desk I was greeted by a cute blond lady. She smiled and showed me some braces. I think she was in her mid-twenties, possibly even a little older, closer to my age, but the braces and the hairdo, which was too short and not evenly cut, along with a scattering of freckles that decorated her flushed cheeks, made her look like a spunky 1950s schoolkid as seen under a huge magnifying glass.
“Mr. Statler,” she said. “How are you?”
“You remember me?”
“We went to school together.”
“We did?”
“Belinda Hickam. I was a year under you. You were in the journalism club and you wrote for the high school paper. I think you wrote about chess.”
“Actually I only wrote one article about chess.”
“I guess that was the one I read. You’ve been hired to do a column, right?”
“I haven’t been hired yet.”
“Well, I’m going to be optimistic about it. Mrs. Timpson is waiting to see you.”
“Which way?” I said.
She pointed at a foyer where I could see a heap of stacked boxes, advised me to start in that direction and she would buzz Mrs. Timpson that I was on my way back.
“Any advice?” I asked.
“Keep your hands and feet on the visitor’s side of the desk, don’t make any sudden moves, and try not to make direct eye contact.”
2
I weaved around some stacked boxes and a couple of chairs and into the dark end of a foyer where there was light coming from behind a frosted glass door that had the moniker MRS. MARGOT TIMPSON, EDITOR, stenciled on it in black letters.
I tapped gently on the door and a voice that was well practiced at yelling asked me to come in.
Mrs. Timpson was sitting behind her desk and she had pushed back from it in her office chair and was studying me carefully. She had hair too red on the sides and too pink in the thin spots. Her face was eroded with deep canals over which a cheap powder had been caked, like sand over the Sphinx. Her breasts rested comfortably in her lap; they seemed to have recently died and she just hadn’t taken time to dispose of them. I took her age to be somewhere between eighty and around the time of the discovery of fire.
“Sit down,” she said, and her dentures moved when she spoke, as if they might be looking for an escape route.
I took the only chair and looked as intelligent as you might when you’re trying to shake Jim Beam and way too many cold beer chasers.
“You look like you’ve been drinking,” she said.
“Last night. A party.”
“I’ve heard you have a drinking problem.”
“Where would you hear that?”
“From the owner of Fat Billy’s Saloon. He’s my husband. You know, the little shithole just outside of town?”
“I was drinking, but I’m not a drunk.”
“I thought you said it was a party.”
“A party of one. It’s not a habit. I just tied one on a bit. You own a bar, so you know how it is. Now and then, you just drink more than you should.”
“The husband owns the bar,” she said, capturing her teeth with her upper lip as they moved a little too far forward. “He and I are separated. Have been for twenty years. We just never got around to divorcing. We get along all right, long as we don’t live together, or see each other that often, or commu
nicate in any way. But he called and told me about you. He knew you, of course, knew you were trying to get on here at the paper. He said you mentioned it quite a few times between drinks.”
“Guess I was a little nervous.”
“He said you used to play football, quarterback for the Bulldogs. I looked you up. You lost most of your games, didn’t you?”
“But I threw some good passes. I think I have a high school record.”
“No. It got beat two years ago by the Johnson boy. What’s his name? Shit. Can’t think of it. But he beat you. Colored fella.”
I thought to myself: Colored? I hadn’t heard that used in many a moon.
“You were in the service?”
“Signed up for Afghanistan after the towers went down. I was there, but I ended up in Iraq. I kind of felt snookered on that end of the deal.”
“You’re not messed up in the head from being over there, are you?”
“No,” I said, “but the whole thing left me feeling like a cheap date that had been given cab fare and a slap on the ass on the way out the door.”
Timpson twisted her lips, and lined me up with a watery eyeball. “That was humor, right?”
“Yes, ma’am.”
“Just checking.” She swiveled her chair and looked at me from another angle. “I hire you, you don’t have to sit behind a desk all the time, but I like to think you’re working. That your time is my time, and my time is my own. You know this job doesn’t pay much?”
“It’s a start. I can work my way up.”
“Hell, you’re almost at the ceiling now, boy. Thing is, you come from skyscraper material. You had that job in Houston, a Pulitzer nomination. What was it, something about some murder?”
“That’s right. It was luck I was nominated.”
“I was thinking it might have been. Still, you didn’t last in Houston.”
“I came back here for a while, then joined the military.”
“Could there have been a reason you suddenly dropped that job in Houston? What was the problem there?”
“My boss and I didn’t get along.”
“Because you drank?”
“No, ma’am.”
“You know I can call him and ask.”
“You call him, I don’t know he’ll have much to say about the drinking, but whatever he says I doubt any of it will be good, even after several years. He doesn’t like me.”
“You can be straight with me. Nothing you say will embarrass or shock me.”
“I was banging his wife. And his stepdaughter. The daughter, by the way, was thirty, the mother forty-eight.”
“No teenagers in the mix?”
“No, ma’am.”
“And I assume your indiscretions do not include the family dog.”
“No, ma’am. I believe you have to draw a line somewhere.”
“You think you’re quite the player, don’t you, boy?”
“I did then.”
Mrs. Timpson pursed her lips. “Go on out there and have Beverly, that’s the receptionist—”
“We met,” I said. “And I believe it’s Belinda.”
“Have her show you your desk. Working for a newspaper is like riding a bicycle or having sex, I suppose. Once you’ve done it, you should be able to do it again. But you can fall off a goddamn bicycle and you can fail to pull out in time when you’re doing the deed. So experience isn’t everything. Use a little common sense.”
“I will.”
“I hope so. Won’t be much in the way of Pulitzer Prize material to write about here, though. Last thing we had in the paper, outside of world news, that was anywhere near exciting was a rabid raccoon down at the Wal-Mart garden center last week. He chased a stock boy around and they had to shoot him.”
“The stock boy or the raccoon?”
“There’s that sense of humor again.”
“Yes, ma’am. And I promise, I’m all done now.”
“Good. I’m putting you on a column. That’s the job you wanted, wasn’t it?”
“Yes, ma’am.”
“Maybe it was a skunk.”
“Beg your pardon?”
“The animal in Wal-Mart. Now that I think about it, it was a skunk, not a raccoon…Your column. It’s for the Sunday features. Most of the time you’ll be out of the office, but you got a desk. Still, you’ll report to me regularly. Get a taste today. Leave when you want to. Tomorrow morning, nine sharp, we’ll toss you into the fire.”
I got up and smiled and stuck out my hand to shake. She gave me a dismissive wave of the hand.
I started for the door.
“Varnell Johnson,” she said.
I turned. “Ma’am?”
“That was the colored boy’s name—one that broke your passing record. He could throw like a catapult and run like a goddamn deer.”
3
When I came out of Timpson’s office one of the reporters at one of the few occupied desks, a twentyish black guy in a bright yellow shirt with the sleeves rolled up, waved me over. It was like the president summoning a lackey, but I started over there anyway, went to his desk as he stood up and pushed his chair aside. He was short and broad-shouldered, with his hair cropped close, a crisp part cut into it. I stuck out my hand and we shook. He had one of those determined handshakes, not so brisk, but really strong, like it was more of a contest than a greeting.
“Cason Statler,” I said.
“I know who you are. I’m Oswald, like the guy that shot Kennedy.”
“Glad to meet you, Oswald.”
“How did it go in there?” he asked.
“I’m part of the team.”
“Oh, there are no team players here. We’re all pretty much out for ourselves. Trust me on that. Bend over and you’ll feel an intrusion. Look, I know Timpson seems old and grumpy and pretty much out of date, but I want you to know, she doesn’t just seem that way—she is that way.”
“We had a particularly pithy exchange about the colored.”
He grinned at me, and this time it seemed genuine. “Welcome to nineteen fifty-nine.”
“Actually, I’m from here, and I’d put this place more about late nineteen seventy. So don’t go putting it down.”
“I’ll take your word for it,” Oswald said. “I didn’t move here until last year.”
“Why?”
“I’m asking myself that every day. But people are always telling me how it was wonderful in the old days. Probably not so wonderful for black folk, though.”
“Oh, I don’t know. Wouldn’t you love to come home to a shack out back of a white man’s plantation and sing some Negro spirituals after a hard day of picking cotton? Kind of kick back to let your whip lashes cool?”
That actually got a snicker out of him. “The only thing I’ve ever picked is my nose. I heard you were in the military.”
“That’s been a little while back. I had an accident and they had to let me leave.”
“You look fine now.” He said that like I had never been hurt.
“Accident was bad then, but I healed quicker than they expected. I haven’t made a big point of telling the military that.”
“I heard you got some medals,” he said.
“They were passing them out that day,” I said. “See you, Oswald.”
I saw Belinda putting down the phone, and as I walked away from Oswald’s desk, she rose from hers and intercepted me.
“That was Mrs. Timpson. She said I should show you your desk.”
She led me over to it and I was chauvinistic enough to watch her walk and decide she really was more than cute. She was a major looker, a little out of style in the hair and makeup department, but she dressed all right and I liked the way her skirt fit; it was tight enough and right enough to make the world seem like a happy place for at least a few moments.
“This is it,” she said.
It looked like everyone else’s desk. There was a computer on it and there was a drawer in the center and drawers on the sides. I opened them. T
he ones on the sides were empty. The one in the center had pencils and pens and paper clips and half a pack of Winterfresh gum. I took a stick, peeled it and put it in my mouth. It was like trying to chew a Band-Aid.
Belinda showed me her braces. “Good, huh?”
I took the gum out of my mouth, wadded it up inside the wrapper, dropped it in the trash can. “Not so much.”
“It’s been in there since the creation of gum.”
“I believe that.”
“So, how did you like our fearless editor?” Belinda asked.
“Very colorful.”
Belinda smiled her mouthful of braces at me. “That’s not what the others here call her.”
“No?”
“No.” She looked over her shoulder at Oswald, who had returned to his seat behind his desk. “What about the assassin of John F. Kennedy?”
“I can’t decide if he’s just testy or an asshole.”
She smiled. “Actually, Cason, he’s a testy asshole.”
I went around and met some of the reporters, folks in the advertising office, and was told a lot of them were out on assignments and I would meet them later. I made a few promises of lunch, went over to my desk and sat for a while and moved a pencil around.
It wasn’t as good as the desk I had in Houston. It wasn’t as good a newspaper. The pencil was even cheap. But here I was. I had screwed things up so I could arrive at just this spot. I was deep into having myself a pity party when Oswald, the testy asshole, came over. I had hoped me and him were through for the day. But no such luck.
“Timpson just called me,” he said. “She wants me to help you get your feet wet.”
“Go ahead, dampen me.”
“Well, Francine, the previous columnist, had a bunch of ideas she was working on, and Timpson thought you might want to look over those, see if you could get a running start before you had to come up with your own. You’re not obligated to use any of them, but she told me to tell you to take a look…You know, I thought I was going to get this job.”
“I was beginning to suspect that,” I said.
“But no, she wanted a certain cachet. She thought it would be nice PR having someone who had been nominated for the Pulitzer.”