Sure you don’t want some cake?”
“No,” Bryan said. “I don’t want cake. I want to find out what’s going on.”
Pookie nodded slowly. “We’ll get this figured out, Bryan. The dream thing doesn’t make any sense, and I know that’s messing with you, but I need you to try and relax so your brain works right.”
“I don’t want to relax.”
“Come on, trust Doctor Chang. Did you feel better after seeing your dad?”
“No,” Bryan said. “I didn’t.”
“L-L-W-T-L. Look, man, if there’s a cover-up, and the chief of frickin’ police is involved, then you
Patience? Easy for Pookie to say. And yet patience was exactly what they needed — Bryan was a hunter. If he lost his shit now, he might spook the prey.
Someone was responsible for all of this.
Bryan wouldn’t rest until he found out who that was.
Hector’s Revenge
Aggie James picked up the Tupperware container that had been tossed his way. It hurt to do even that. His body ached. He needed a hit. Something. Anything. Drying out sucked.
He opened the container and smelled it. His trembling stomach rejoiced at the scent of the brown stew filled with carrots, potatoes and thick chunks of some stringy meat.
The old lady had come with her cart again. They hadn’t drawn his chain all the way back this time. He could move enough to reach the food. That made him potentially dangerous, he supposed, but the old lady didn’t seem to worry about him. She came close, leaned in, then sniffed.
This time her scarf was pink with big red spots. She wore a brown skirt instead of gray, but the sweater and shoes were the same.
“This stew looks good,” Aggie said. “What’s in it?”
She stopped sniffing him long enough to look him in the eye. “Is good for you. Eat.”
She had spoken to him. It was the first English he’d heard in days. “Lady, what’s your name?”
“Hillary.”
She reached into her cart and threw a sandwich to the Chinaman wearing the Super Bowl XXI shirt. He caught it and ripped open the brown paper. He said something that sounded like
“Please,” he said to Hillary as he chewed. “I no talk. I leave. Please.
His sandwich looked like egg salad. The man was terrified. He had tears in his eyes, yet he still crammed the food into his mouth, chewed and swallowed as fast as he could. Aggie recognized that behavior all too well — if you didn’t know when or where your next meal might come from, or if someone was going to kick your ass and take your food away, you ate as much as you could as fast as you could.
“Please,” the Chinaman said.
Hillary just stared at him.
What a group they were: Aggie the bum, Hector the Mexican and the hungry Chinaman. Hector had two sandwiches lying in front of him. He hadn’t touched them. Hillary had come twice since the masked men had taken his wife. Hector didn’t move a lot anymore, just lay there in a fetal ball. Aggie couldn’t blame the guy — wife and kid, gone.
“Please-please,” the Chinaman said to Hillary. He shoved the last of the sandwich into his mouth, then pushed his fingers and palms together, like he was praying. “I no talk.
Hillary rattled off a sharp, short phrase of what sounded like that chinky-chong talk, and the Chinaman shrank away. He fell to his ass, then back-crawled until he hit the white wall.
“Damn, Hillary,” Aggie said. “What did you say to him?”
“I told him I’ll bring egg rolls next time,” Hillary said without looking away from the man.
“You’ve got egg rolls?”
She looked at Aggie again. “You don’t seem as scared as he does. Why?”
Aggie shrugged. “Doesn’t look like I’m going anywhere unless you let me go. Besides, I got nothing to live for. I’m pretty scared, I guess. If I’m gonna die, I’m gonna die.”
“There are different ways of dying,” she said. “Some worse than others. You don’t know what’s going to happen to you.”
Aggie shrugged again. “What’s gonna happen is what’s gonna happen. Maybe I’m a little” — he paused as a shiver ripped him from toes to nose — “a little preoccupied right now.”
“You’re already feeling better, I can …”
Her voice trailed off, but somehow Aggie knew that she’d been about to say:
Aggie decided to stop thinking about that. He didn’t want to know if he was right.
“I’d be better still if I could get my medicine,” he said. “How about it, lady? Can I get my medicine I had on me when I came in?”
“No.”
“But I need my medicine. I’m sick.”
Hillary shook her head. “You don’t need it, or you won’t soon. We’ve had many like you here before. You’ll be fine in another day or two.”
Aggie had dried out before. Sure, the shakes would be gone, as would the shits and the pukes, but he’d be far from
“I need it,” Aggie said.
Hillary smiled. “Perhaps in a few days, this
The white jail-cell door swung open with its grinding, metallic squeak. Six white-robed men came in, hoods pulled up over monster masks — Wolf-Face, Pig-Face, Hello Kitty, a bug and a demon-face. The last one through wore the black-skinned, red-lined face of Darth Maul.
Wolf-Face carried the pole with the hook. Demon-Face held the remote control.
The Chinaman stared and muttered rapid-fire words that Aggie didn’t understand. The guy had been unconscious when they brought him in — this was his first time seeing the freak show.
The white-robed men closed in on Hector.
Hector didn’t move. He remained in a fetal position.
Demon-Face pressed a button on the remote. The chains started to clank. Aggie hustled back to the wall, scooping up his chain as he went. He rested his neck against the hole, letting the chain play through his fingers so it wouldn’t loop his foot or anything like that.
The Chinaman was freaked, but not so freaked he didn’t mimic Aggie’s actions.
Hector’s chain pulled tight, started dragging him, and still he didn’t react. The monster-faced men closed in. Even as he slid, four sets of hands grabbed at his arms and legs. The wooden pole descended, its metal hook reaching for his collar.
Then Hector’s chain rang with a strange new
It stopped retracting.
Aggie looked to the hole that led into the wall. There, his chain was balled into some kind of a knot large enough that it wouldn’t fit through the stainless-steel flange.
The monster-faced men looked too, their black-gloved hands stopping in midmotion around the Mexican’s hands and feet. In the brief, still silence that filled the white room, Hector spoke.