Read The Summer I Died: A Thriller Online

Authors: Ryan C. Thomas,Cody Goodfellow

The Summer I Died: A Thriller (8 page)

BOOK: The Summer I Died: A Thriller
4.96Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads


We should have packed a lunch.

I
was
suddenly aware that our inevitable hunger would have to wait a considerable amount of time to be satiated. The nearest town from Bobcat Mountain was Bobtail, so named because it was at the back end of the mountain, and it was a good half hour away.

I put the dice back in my pocket.
We drove in silence for a bit until we arrived, then sat a bit longer until we convinced ourselves to make the hike. Tooth took the
9mm
out of the case, tucked it in his waistband and pulled his shirt over it.


What are you doing that for?


Park police patrol here
sometimes
. They see some strange case they might get nosy and ask me to ope
n it up. This way, I just tell ’
em I got a gargantuan cock.

Unlike most mountains in New Hampshire, this one didn’t have a little man in a booth asking for parking money, so we just drove up a dirt road that dead-ended about two hundred feet up, and parked off to the side. We took the six pack Tooth had grabbed from his house and started trudging up the nearest trail like two dwarves high on ore fumes. Tooth even whistled, the gap in his bridge making him sound like a hot teakettle. It wasn’t long before mosquitoes and gnats considered us fine dining. At one point, in the shadows of the trees, the bugs got so bad that I put my head in my shirt and jogged a bit. Through the fabric I could smell pine sap bubbling out of the surrounding tree trunks. The
firecracker
snapping of twigs behind me told me Tooth had followed my lead.

We came out into a clearing about a third of the way up the mountain. The sun was out in full force and I could feel it working its claws into my face. Tooth was smart to wear a hat; unfortunately, my head was small and I looked kind of ridiculous in them. Looking out you could see for a distance, though there wasn’t much to see but trees, the road we’d arrived on
winding through them
, and summer h
aze
.


Motherfuc
ker those mosquitoes are hungry.

Tooth
swatted
at a few brave ones that followed us into the open air.

He stared at the mountains in the distance and
narrowed his eyes.

You see that?


What?


That. That interesting thing over there.

He pointed out at the mountains and I tried to follow his trajectory. I squinted but all I saw was trees.


I don’t see anything interesting,

I told him.


Neither do I. I have to get out of this place. And soon.

He was

California dreaming

again and I
’d
walked right into it. I’d kind of figured by now that Tooth’s summer mission was to get me to move to the west coast with him, and since I had no intention of going, it was going be a long summer. He popped the tab on one of the beers and handed it to me, took another himself and chugged it down in one gulp. When he was done he looked me in the eye and I could see he wanted to say something. I figured he was going to ask me to move again, but instead he punched me in the
shoulder
and yelled,

Let’s shoot something, you pantywaist!

Any pain that had dissipated from my arm was now back
in
full force. I’d have returned the punch but quickly realized the futility of it. Tooth always got this way when
he drank; I was used to it. Hitting him back would only
encourage him and
fuel his energy.

He walked to the tree line, put the empty beer can on a low tree limb and backed up to where I stood.

Bet you an ass-
kicking I make this shot,

he said. Aiming the gun, he squared his feet and fired.

Bang!

The re
port wasn’t nearly as loud as the .44 had been, and the recoil was mild at best. The beer can flipped up in the air like a gold medal gymnast and landed on its side a little ways in the woods. He looked at me and smiled. I flinched.


Here.

He handed
me the gun.

I’ll have to owe you that ass-kicking. I hurt my hand last time I hit you. You’re a bony little fucker.

I hefted the gun while he went and put the can back on the limb. When he was walking back he pretended to dodge bullets. And that was the first moment in my life I scared myself, because I felt how easy it would be to shoot someone in the head, dump the body in the woods, and walk away scot-free. The simplicity of it shook me.

Or maybe I’d just read too many comics and seen too many movies where the only time someone had a gun was when they
were blo
w
ing
another person’s head off. Because, somehow, despite knowing the feeling was wrong, it felt like that’s what I was supposed to do.

I handed the gun back to Tooth.


I can’t shoot.
My arm hurts from when you punched me,

I lied
.


You pussy. Suck it up and squeeze the trigger. This gun is so light a baby could shoot it.

Forcefully, he pushed the gun back in my hand, placed his own hand over mine and made me grip it firmly. He didn’t back away until I faked an air of confidence, though what I really did was clear my mind of
any thoughts that would land me in the loony bin. Across the field, the beer can reflected the sun so it appeared a train was coming out of the woods. I relax
e
d my grip, sighted down the barrel, and pulled the trigger.

Bang!

The noise was more like a firecracker than
a cannon, and perhaps because of this I felt less nervous. My shot landed square and sent the can cartwheeling backwards to the ground. Tooth ran over and picked it up and brought it back.


Damn, you’re a natural.

He fingered the bullet hole
.

The bullet had gone through dead center, a bit below Tooth’s hole. I didn’t tell him I had pictured the can as a man’s head when I shot, though I doubt he would have given a shit. Then again, maybe I didn’t tell him because I didn’t want to hear myself admit it.

 

 

CHAPTER 8

 

By midday we’d shot so many holes in the cans they were unusable even as targets. At twenty yards my aim had gotten so I could hit my mark about seventy percent of the time
.
Tooth
’s accuracy
was a much better
. Even drunk he could shoot the ass hairs off a gnat. After we’d grown bored, he wobbled around picking up the empty shells.


I can reuse these,

he told me.

I wasn’t so sure homemade bullets were a good idea, but for all I knew the ones we’d shot hadn’t come from a store anyway.

We rolled another joint and sat and looked out over the forest. Not much had changed in the past couple hours, except maybe some clouds had reshaped themselves. Off in the distance, a bleak gray was spreading over the blue sky and I figured by supper time we’d be in for rain.

Tooth passed me the joint and said,

Want to go to O’Conner’s tonight?

I sucked in the stale smoke and coughed, then drummed my fist on my chest, apelike.

I’d just as soon not go back there.


Yeah, but they’re the only ones that don’t check IDs.

Getting carded was the least of my worries. The last time we’d ventured into O’Conner’s was on Christmas
break and I’d ended up with a fat lip and piss-drenched pants and Tooth had ended up with a broken nose. O’Conner’s was a local hangout for some bored skinheads who had nothing to do and no one to take it out on, these parts being primarily white. As a result, an unsuspecting soul who happened to remark about a film starring a black man was like a gift from the gods.

No sooner had I mentioned the Wesley Snipe film
Blade
to Tooth than a fist the size of the moon hauled me out of my chair and brought me face to face with a suspender-wearing gorilla with two lightning bolts tattooed on his skull.


We don’t discuss eggplants in here,

he breathed.

You want to proliferate the spreading disease that is the black man, you do it somewhere else.

Had I been alone, I would have thanked the man for leaving my neck in one piece and slinked out the door like a frightened mouse. Unfortunately, I was with Tooth, who never passes up an opportunity to land me in jail or a hospital bed. He came around the back of the skinhead and put his arm around the guy like they were best buddies.


I say we lynch this little fucker,

he said.

Naturally, my eyes went wide and I hoped Lightning Bolt Head understoo
d the joke. He gave Tooth a serious
stare, as if he might pick him up and use him as a toothpick. The owner of the bar came over, carrying a golf club, and told us to knock it off or he was calling the cops. But like hyenas trapping two lion cubs, the other skinheads gathered around to support their friend

who could have easily taken both Tooth and me with one finger.


We’re just talking movies,

Lightning Bolt Head said.

The other patrons in the bar, mostly drunks and a few college students home on break, stopped all conversation and started salivating for blood. Normally, I’d have been just as eager for some violence, but my heart just wasn’t in it this time, what with my face likely to be the first target and all.

As the owner walked back
behind the
bar, Tooth gave me his famous glance, the same one he’d shot me in the liquor store, the one that always made my scrotum shrivel, and I suddenly knew I was very likely leaving the bar with missing teeth. It was kindergarten all over again. Tooth was setting up for a distraction and I was going to do something on the sly. But what? There was nothing to swipe from these guys and I sure as hell wasn’t going to blindside one of them.


So what do you say
?

Tooth continue
d.

L
et’s take this nigger-
lover out back and show him what it means to live in the white man’s world
.
Maybe we can get points on our community service, eh?


I know you,

Lightning Bolt Head said.

You’re that guy who got run over by his daddy. What do they call you, Mouth or something?


Tooth.


Yeah, Tooth, nice name. Well, listen here, Tooth, why don’t you fuck off before I stamp my name on your forehead.

He raised his other fist and proudly displayed a three-fingered silver ring that was more brass knuckles than jewelry. Beveled in reverse were the words
Brody was here
. I almost laughed. Almost.


Nice ring,

Tooth replied,

I got one, too. It says ‘Once you go black you never go back.’ Put it right where I had that epiphany. Want to see it?

He pretended to unzip his fly, and it was at this moment I realized Tooth
had stepped over the line of safety. We were in for it now. As the skins stood in stunned silence, waiting to see if Tooth had a cock ring on, I slowly put my foot against the back of Lightning Bolt Head’s knee

and prayed.


That’s it,

the skinhead yelled as he adjusted the ring on his hand for optimal stamping,

we’re all going outside.

Tooth snapped his arm back, fist balled into a battering ram, and I shoved my foot forward. Lightning Bolt Head stumbled as his leg gave out, and in that instant Tooth hit him square in the face. The force of the blow slammed his head back into mine and split my lip. A flash of white erupted under my eyelids and I felt myself falling. Then everything kind of exploded, as if a pack of wolves had been released into a hen house. Fists came from every direction, combat boots flashed at eye level. Yelling and screaming and bottles breaking. Grunts and gouts of blood spitting through the air. Taking advantage of my new position on the ground, I began crawling toward the door over s
hards of green and brown bottle
. I was inches away from salvation when a dozen hands reached down and yanked me up and I knew, without a doubt, that I was a dead man. I pissed myself.

BOOK: The Summer I Died: A Thriller
4.96Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

The Marriage Merger by Jennifer Probst
Mortal Engines by Stanislaw Lem
As Hot As It Gets by Jamie Sobrato
Tutor Me by Hope Stillwater
The Nice and the Good by Iris Murdoch
A Knife to Remember by Jill Churchill