Authors: Trevor Hoyle
âFaggotsville,' said Eddie with a lazy grin. âJeez, we ain't terrorised that burg in a long whiles.'
So far Buddy Holly hadn't said anything. He had the stereo speakers attached to his rear forks turned low and was nodding and clicking his fingers to
Twenty Flight Rock
.
âAny chicks with you?' Jerry Lee said, flicking the grease out of his comb.
I shook my head. âUh-huh.'
âDope?' (Gene)
âNope.'
âGas?' (Jimmy)
âSorry,' I said. âFresh out.'
âWhat kinda wheels you got?' Sal asked me.
âTruck. Er, pick-up. Station wagon.'
âWell which for goddamn fucksakes!'
âSort of a covered pick-up.'
âWhat's in the bundle?' Jimmy asked, running his fingers through his shock of hair.
âRadio equipment.'
âYou a ham?' Eddie said to Brown, who nodded his matted head.
âLooks more like a bum to me,' Marlon said. There were grins, leers and smirks all round.
âI vote we bounce these dudes round the parking lot,' said Little Richard with a brilliant manic smile. âWe're due for some fun. What say?'
With a twist of his left wrist Elvis gunned his machine into throaty life. Choking blue smoke swirled everywhere. I coughed and stepped back, covering my mouth. Brown retreated to the wall. Elvis blipped the throttle and the noise nearly lifted the roof off. Marlon waved his hand and Elvis cut the revs to an idling rumble. âWe'll check out their wheels first,' Marlon said. He shrugged his ponderous shoulders. âNever can tell, they might have something stashed away. Booze, dope, chicks, gas.' He jerked his thumb at me as an indication that we should precede them outside. When the rest of the pack started up you could hardly hear yourself think. In seconds the place was filled with thick blue fog. I lost sight of Brown and was barely able to grope my way to the stairs. My throat was burning and my lungs had seized up.
The machines followed us down the stairs and out onto the pitted and rubbish-strewn concrete of the car park. I now knew why the stat was abandoned and deserted. This mob of prosthetic-implanted look-alikes had taken over Watford Gap and held sway over twenty or thirty miles of motorway. And what, I fumed, were the authorities doing about it? Bugger all.
I leapt aside as Gene aimed the blazing headlamp of his Triumph Bonneville straight at me, his rawboned face and bulging brown
eyes alive with drug-crazed glee. The pack had turned on their stereo systems and we were assailed by a rock ân' roll cacophony of horrendous proportions.
Sal swerved into Brown and pried his bundle loose. He rode off with it with a whoop and a holler, holding the prize above his head. Headlights zig-zagged back and forth, crossed and crisscrossed each other. The booming roar of engines obliterated the night.
Marlon and Eddie and Jerry Lee were over by the van. I ran across with Brown scuttling crab-wise behind me, in time to see Eddie open the side door and stick his blond quiff inside. Jerry Lee held up a warning gloved hand and I slowed to a trot and stopped a few feet away. The others rode up and hemmed us in with idling machinery. Brown looked despairingly at the bundle in Sal's grasp.
âIt's a no-no,' Eddie said, ducking back out and shaking his head.
âZilch?' Marlon said, disbelief and disappointment in equal measure on his broad heavy features. He turned to me gloweringly. âWhat gives?'
I assumed what I thought was a reasonably creditable expression of innocence and said, âLike I told you. Zeroesville. My buddy and me were just passing through, heading for Frisco. We don't have a red cent between us.'
âListen, meathead,' Marlon snarled. âThis is our ground and we don't take kindly to goddamn fucking spics and wetbacks crashing in without paying their dues.'
âEasy on that,' Sal said, stiffening.
âPresent company excepted,' Marlon said, his attention still fixed on me. âWe want. What you got?'
I took the strip of
Temporal
from my back pocket and handed it over.
âYou can have this. It isn't much good. I tried it and nothing happened. But feel free.'
âYou lying crud!' Gene exploded. âYou had a fix all along and you held out!'
Before I knew what was happening he lashed out and the
sharpened studs on his jacket sleeve gouged chunks from my cheek and neck.
âOkay, okay,' Marlon soothed him. âDon't get uptight. Now we've got the stuff we can take care of them in our own sweet time.'
Brown said, rather foolishly I thought, âCut the crap you punks and let me have my bundle back.' (At least he was getting the hang of the jargon.) âIf you don't you might live to regret it.'
âSez who?' Elvis said, and aimed a vicious karate chop at Brown, ineffectual as it happened, because Brown was out of reach.
âNobody takes this from me,' Sal said, clutching the bundle. âNobody.'
âAll right,' said Brown, âif that's how you want to play it,' and seemed to lose all further interest in the proceedings.
I was still busy sopping up blood from my face and neck. The pain should start any second now, I reckoned. The cuts were good and deep.
âI'm getting bored, let's finish it,' Buddy complained, and for the first time I noticed another mistake: his thick black-framed glasses weren't real but painted onto his head like Groucho's moustache.
Jimmy yawned. âHe's right. Let's wishbone the creeps.'
âWishbone?' I glanced round vaguely.
âWhere ya bin living?' Eddie said, and suddenly grinned like a lighthouse beam. âNever heard of wishboning?' He guffawed.
Everybody was smiling and nodding now, â even Marlon. The atmosphere was quite jolly. I said, âNo, never have,' and grinned too to show that I was a good sport, could take a joke with the best of them.
âWhat we do,' Gene confided, watery brown eyes alight, âis we wrap a chain around your left leg and a chain around your right leg. Following me so far? We fasten one of the chains to his bike and the other chain to my bike. Then Eddie and me, we say âSo long', and we go our separate ways. Me this way, him that way. Get it? And you come with the both of us. Some of you comes with me
and some of you with him. If you get my drift. Then we decide the winner.'
âWhat winner?'
âWhoever's got the biggest piece. Why you think it's called âwishboning', schmuck? You mentally retarded or something'?'
I found it hard to believe that they really intended to do this. What was the point? We'd given them all we had to give, which was precious little, admittedly. Was this how they got their âkicks', by murdering innocent people? I looked helplessly at Brown, but he was staring off into space, or rather into the surrounding darkness beyond the halo of light, as if none of this concerned him. I wrung the blood out of my handkerchief and swabbed some more.
Then Little Richard had a wonderful idea. As a preamble to the main event, how about setting fire to the van and watching her blow? Jimmy, both arms draped over the handlebars, fingers loosely spread, gave a twitch of a shrug, which was his way of expressing approval. Elvis leered his, while Gene's perspiring face lit up, and Eddie growled, âRight on.'
Buddy was clicking away to
Blue Jean Baby
, Jerry Lee combing his locks, and Sal muttering darkly about guys who let their mouths run away with them shouldn't be surprised to find a spic knife between their shoulderblades one dark night. Marlon said, âLike it. Let's do it,' and thus it was decided.
Watching the interior of the van brighten and flicker with flame, I couldn't help thinking of Mira and Bev in the long drawer underneath the bunk, which was where they had presumably concealed themselves when Eddie poked his head inside and found it empty.
No good worrying about that now, I told myself, as the fire reached the petrol tank and the van erupted in a spectacular orange fireball, buffeting our faces with a solid wall of heat even at a distance of thirty metres or so. I wrung out my sticky handkerchief.
Brown sidled up and said out of the corner of his mouth, âWhat was the registration number?'
I shook my head. âWon't do any good. It wasn't insured. Besides, the MOT had run out.'
âThe number,' he said through clenched lips. âAnd lie flat.'
I failed to see the connection between these two disparate requests. Still he stared at me. It took a moment or two to remember what it was. âFTJ 109V,' I said.
âThank you,' Brown said, kicking my legs from under me.
He was crouching and fiddling with a small square black device with a short retractable antenna, and the next thing I knew there was a flash of light and a blast that nearly ruptured my eardrums and pieces of hot oily metal were showering down all around us. When I dared to look over the crook of my elbow there was a respectable crater where the pack, moments before, had been clustered; all that remained was a smoking junkyard and the odd twitching dismembered carcase.
âI told them to give it back,' Brown said, levering himself up. âThey can't say I didn't warn them.'
âI thought it was a radio,' I said.
âA radio with four pounds of gelignite inside it. Triggered by shortwave.' He put the device back in his pocket. âThey really ought to have listened. I did warn them.'
âYou did,' I agreed, getting up and dusting myself down. âThey can't say you didn't.'
âThey can't say anything now,' Brown said, giving me an impish sidelong glance. This was the one and only humorous remark I ever heard him utter.
âWhy did you want to know the registration number?'
âI used it as the DFC.'
I raised, then lowered my eyebrows.
âDetonating Frequency Code. Then like a fool forgot it. Lucky you remembered.'
âLucky's not the word,' I said.
âWhat is then?'
âWhat is what?'
âThe word.'
âWhat word?'
âThe word other than lucky.'
âWhat other word other than lucky?'
âYou said âLucky's not the word'. I'm asking you what is.'
âNo idea.'
âThen why say lucky wasn't the word if it was?'
âIt's an expression, âLucky's not the word'. It doesn't mean there
is
another word. It's a figure of speech.'
âI've never heard it.'
âTake my word for it.'
âWhat word?'
âMy word. My assurance.'
ââAssurance' is the word then?'
âLook,' I said. âLet's just say it was lucky I remembered. Will that do?'
âFine by me.'
âSwell.'
This futile conversation had distracted me from the van, all ablaze. As we approached it the molten core beckoned enticingly, seething fingers of fire reaching up greedily like slow-motion lightning. A hot blast scorched my face, singeing my eyebrows and moustache. I fought for breath.
We were on fire!
We had stopped, slewed slantwise on the hard shoulder. I scrambled out and ran round to the side door, wrenched it open and dived inside, hands outstretched in the dark to where I knew the fire extinguisher to be. It was there all right, but it was rusted into its bracket.
Mira screamed to know what was happening. I was out of breath with panic and exertion and couldn't answer her. Fumes filled the interior.
âWhy are we on fire?' Brown asked, which struck me as rather an irrelevant question under the circumstances.
The engine hissed and spat as I smothered it with foam. It
seemed positively angry about something, as if I had foiled its carefully-planned attempt at suicide. Engines can be such bad-tempered buggers. All along it had carried us grudgingly, just waiting for a chance to explode, and had chosen its moment well, â here in the dead-end of nowhere, â leaving me to cope with a sick child, an irascible wife and a terrorist loonie.
I was so embittered I hadn't the patience or the inclination to answer Shakespeare's questions and told him to piss off; let him find out about the trials and tribulations of the modern world from somebody else for a change.
Inside Brown's bundle (you might have guessed) was a radio transceiver.
He set it up behind some dusty bushes just off the hard shoulder and twiddled some knobs. There were a couple of squawks and a tinny voice spoke in a foreign accent. Brown asked questions about the âcurrent situation' and requested an âupdate', the answers to which I didn't understand, though apparently Brown did. Could we summon help? I asked Brown; no, we couldn't. The authorities might be eavesdropping and if we mentioned our location over the airwaves (where
was
our location?) they would have not the slightest trouble in sending a squad to âtake us out'.
âBut that's what I want,' I said. âTo be taken out.'
Brown shook his starved rat's face impatiently. To âtake us out', he explained, was a euphemism for death by slaughter. We would be machine-gunned and left to decompose in the bushes. I replied that I found this somewhat fanciful, if not downright melodramatic.
More unintelligible gabble came over the set and I thought I caught a reference to âLibyan logistical support' which, I noticed, made Brown suck at his teeth excitedly. Was this, then, an international conspiracy? Who was banding together with whom, and for what purpose? In my mind's eye I visualised the entire country alive with secret subversive cells, a grid or network of
political plotters and social disrupters from coast to coast. Why were they never mentioned on any TV newscast? Why didn't the
Sun
do an in-depth analytical exposé on them?
It seemed incredible to me that all this underground activity was going on and nobody knew anything about it. At home on Zuttor Estate we were kept in ignorance of such matters. They might have been taking place on another planet.