“Who?”
“Yeah, you know who.”
Wally's eyes lost their trapped animal look.
Â
His lips curled slightly in a preflight posture.
Â
But with that one bullet left in the gun, I slapped it shut.
Â
Then I pointed it at Wally's very real legs.
Â
“Let me explain this real slowly, Wally.
Â
The reason I'm here has nothing to do with mob hits or made-for-TV movies or Fear Factor or even the Easter bunny, okay?”
“Stolen drugs?” Wally guessed.
I paused longer than I should have.
Â
Seeing my astonished reaction, Wally brightened, and cut me off.
“That's it, ain't it?
Â
Somebody stole yer stash.
Â
And they're here, ain't they?
Â
An' yer gonna
kill'em
.”
“No,” I said.
Â
“No, you're wrong about that too.”
“Am I, now?”
Â
He almost sneered, then made a little connect-the-dots motion with one hand.
Â
“
Ya
better get yer story straight for Sheriff Cody.”
He nodded toward Main street, whereâsure enoughâa man was getting into what resembled a police car in the distance, confirmed when the flashing lights came on.
Â
I turned back to find Wally a few steps closer to me, freezing only as I lifted the revolver higher, toward his chest.
He looked from the barrel to my face.
Â
“Give it up, partner,” he suggested, just full of advice.
“Give
what
up?” I asked.
It must have seemed like a rhetorical question, because he had no answer for it.
Â
I left him there, and ducked out behind the service station in a sudden panic as the Sheriff neared, siren wailing now.
Â
Angling left, I ran straight into the field of corn, letting the tassels whip at my face, soon feeling an odd commingling of exhilaration and dread.
Â
And soon enough I heard a voice from somewhere behind me, ordering me to stop.
Â
But it sounded distant, and seemed almost unreal as I tried to escape back into a corner of my mind that remembered sanity and comfort.
Â
A warning gunshot brought me back from my illusion of safety, and then I realized I still had Wally's revolver.
Damn.
On impulse I tossed the thing aside, then angled back to the right again, just in case I was being followed.
Â
When I finally stopped five minutes later, and out of breath, I listened to the night.
Â
I could hear nothing except my own panting, now.
Â
The Shell station was gone.
Â
The town was gone.
Â
Only the corn surrounded me, faintly lit by starlight.
What now?
I thought, helplessly.
Â
Any suggestions, Rachel?
Reaching out, I felt for a young ear of corn.
Â
I touched it like a blind person might, measuring its thickness, its firmness.
Â
I imagined the possibly genetically modified kernels inside that very ear one day being trapped in a
can on
aisle 6 at the
Piggly
Wiggly in Beaufort, South Carolina.
Â
Or would it be aisle 7 at the Safeway in Bullhead City, Arizona?
Â
And what impoverished mother or beer-gut redneck needing a side veggie to go with their pulled pork sandwich would make the purchase?
Â
Maybe the TV would be on as they ate, too, blaring another SUV commercial during half time on Monday Night Football.
Â
One thing was certain to me: even if folks ate Franken-corn without complaining, they would never take a modified HIV virus willingly, even if it proved to possess longevity as a side effect.
Â
Not anymore than third-world dictators would want their burgeoning populations to take it.
Â
Especially not those who breathed polluted air like our urban cowboys did, while soccer moms at the mall breathed the prayer
Holy Mary, full of grace, let me find a parking space.
No
sir'ee
,
Boba-krishna
.
A water tower figured in the nightmare from which George woke me sometime in the middle of the night, as he crept past my casket.
Â
“Don't mind me,” he whispered, although it was the light he'd switched on that had done the damage.
I sat up slowly, and stared at his back as he went into the bathroom.
Â
Then I lay back and stared at the ceiling, and sure enough, a roach was up there.
Â
As I watched it, I felt an ironic smile form on my lips.
Â
If I ever did manage to get back to sleep now, I knew I'd be dreaming that things were crawling on me as well.
Â
And maybe they would be, even though this wasn't Mabel's.
“Hey, George,” I said.
Â
“You know everybody in town too?”
“Just about, why?”
“Know a recluse, a loner . . . a guy who doesn't mingle much, walks around at night?”
George flushed.
Â
I sat up again to see him fill a glass with water from the sink.
Â
“That would be me,” he admitted, and grinned.
Â
“Or you?”
In the mirror I watched George drink.
Â
I blinked several times, imagining each time that George's face was others I'd seenâWally, the postmaster, Edie, the Sheriff.
Â
Everyone drinking the water.
Â
The entire town, drinking water from the town's ugly frog tower up there on that hill among the evergreens.
Â
A connection solidified.
Â
But was it only my imagination?
Â
I tried to tell myself that M-Telomerase couldn't be disseminated through a water supply, even if Zion didn't use chlorine, or someone managed to neutralize it somehow.
Â
But the images that invaded my mind wouldn't stop, nor would the bizarre idea that now infected me, born of paranoia: what if Jim Baxter had succeeded where I'd failed?
Â
What if a means of keeping the altered HIV virus alive through digestion had been discovered in his notes on the plant virus, and that's why he'd been murdered?
Â
If he'd been murdered at all, of course, and if my reasoning wasn't as illogical as Wally mistaking me for a hit man, instead.
“Small town,” I heard myself say.
Â
“I was thinking it would be a good place to hide.
Â
Like maybe someone who testified in a trial somewhere?”
George's face seemed to stiffen in the mirror over the sink.
Â
He dropped his water glass, and it shattered with a metallic pop.
“You okay?” I asked, momentarily.
He didn't want to turn around, but stared down at the jagged fragments of glass in the sink.
Â
“Slipped,” he explained.
Â
Then he scooped up the glass slowly, using a paper towel.
Â
He carried a handful of shards past me to drop them into the waste basket near the bolted rear stockroom door.
Â
There they rattled loudly.
“Name Walter Mills ring a bell?” I asked him.
George shook his head mechanically, but he still didn't look at me, his fish scale eyes moving rapidly from side to side.
Â
“Buzzer either.
Â
Who is he?”
“Private dick my ex-wife hired to find me.”
He nodded as if he'd been told to.
Â
“It's hard to keep secrets in this town.
Â
If he's here, he'll find
ya
.
Â
You owe alimony?”
“No,” I said, “I'm honest about money.”
Â
As opposed to everything else?
“What's she want with you, then?”
“What's any woman want?”
George turned toward his room.
Â
“I wouldn't know about that.”
“You ever been married?”
“Me?
Â
Ha.”
“Wonderful thing, if you get a lobotomy first.”
“Where's your ring?” he asked, without even looking.
“Don't have one in my nose either, anymore,” I lied.
The muscles in George's shoulders seemed to loosen.
Â
“See
ya
in the morning,” he told me.
“Night.”
The door closed.
Â
I went to the sink and turned on the water faucet.
Â
I put my hands under the water and stared at the flow.
Â
I cupped it, and sniffed at it.
Â
Then I saw another roach scuttle up onto the edge of the toilet bowl.
Â
I shuddered, and instinctively tossed the water cupped in my hands onto the roach.
Â
It fell into the bowl, and did a little roach dance before it turned, legs down, and began to swim from side to side, seeking a way out of its own dilemma.
Â
Tiny waves radiated outward from the roach's tiny legs, like a buzz.
Â
I flushed the toilet, and covered the sink drain with a stopper.
Â
Then I returned to my vampire's bed.
Â
This time I left the light on, deciding to put a pillow over my eyes to help me sleep.
Â
I also popped a pill, swallowing it dry.
Â
I hadn't known what to expect in Zion, but I did imagine needing
Xanax
to sleep.
Â
Now I couldn't imagine sleeping here without it.
Â
How could I sleep even in a regular bedâmuch less a coffinâuntil I uncovered the truth?
Â
Unthinkable.
Â
So I needed
Xanax
to calm down and stop thinking so damn much.
Â
To relax, to let go.
Â
Just a little prescription drug . . . not a crutch, like for so many other people.
Â
Except I'd gotten mine by forging a prescription blank from Dr. Bischoff's office.
Â
That made it an illegal drug.
Â
Not that Bischoff would have minded.
Â
Tactar's
clinical investigator and outside consultant had maintained an office next to mine before
Hepker
got my ass.
Â
When I went in to take Bischoff's order for Kung
Pao
chicken one day, I'd spied the blank pad he used in private practice, and tore off an extra sheet or three.
Â
The
Xanax
wasn't wasted, now . . . thanks, Doc . . . but for extra measure and peace of mind I used the pillow to ward off the light.
The light I left on to ward off the roaches.
Morning brought a new wrinkle to the twisted whorls of my already conflicted mind.
Â
For his part, George proved unusually sympathetic in letting me sleep late.
Â
While the razor I glimpsed in his hand when I opened my eyes was obviously intended for the boxes he needed to slice open in order to stock his shelves, it still took a moment for that realization to register on my nervous system.
“Morning,” he announced in oddly cheerful good humor.
I sat bolt upright in my casket, eyes wide.
Â
Sure enough, there was a beatific smile on George's face that didn't seem quite sane, somehow.
Â
The pupils of his eyes appeared to be slightly dilated, too.
Â
Obviously, I didn't know him well enough to judge his possible moods shifts, but pathological reactions were something else again.
“Talk to me, George,” I said slowly, and with suspicion.
“'Bout what?”
Â
His exuberance faded a bit into a look that could only be described as innocence.
Â
The thing that made babies so attractive because we'd long lost it ourselves.
Â
Yet it was disconcerting to compare it to the night before.
Â
Here was a new man, a person of different temperament than the one I'd observed only hours before.
I climbed out of the bed that entombed me to stand before him.
Â
“Tell me how you feel, George.
Â
Right now, I mean.
Â
Are you taking any medication?”
Â
I studied his eyes closely.
“Medication?
Â
No.
Â
And I feel fine.
Â
I feel . . .”
Â
He stopped, as though considering a new experience for the first time.
Â
In my own memory I shuffled the images of previous drug test subjects, some of them with this same lookâwhat we called the placebo look.
Â
The non-reactive response prior to any display of measurable side effects.
Â
But this was not my test subject.
Â
If he was anyone's, he was perhaps Sean's or Walter's or whoever the hell else had been skulking around Zion's water tower in the night.
Â
“I feel . . . great,” George concluded.