head over heels.
He landed on his Helmet Cam, bounced twice and then rolled into a bitter-smelling thicket of poison ivy. There he lay, scratching frantically, until a spear of sunshine lanced through the leafy canopy and caught him squarely in the eyes.
Derek recalled with alarm that daylight caused vampires to either melt or catch fire, possibly both. In a panic he crawled back to the mired boat and scrunched beneath its broad bow, where he cowered like an overgrown mole, shielding his face with the freshly dented Helmet Cam.
He braced against the dreaded first symptoms of vampire-hood by reciting a chant of resistance that Dax Mangold kept repeating in Revenge of the Blood Moon:
“Eee-ka-laro! Eee-ka-laro! Gumbo mucho eee-ka-laro!”
The English translation was not known to Derek, but the word eee-ka-laro made him think of eclairs, his favorite dessert. Chocolate eclairs filled with French vanilla custard!
Soon Derek’s stomach began snarling with hunger, a beast more bold and ferocious than any mere vampire.***
Sickler wasn’t losing any sleep over the missing survivalist. The longer Derek Badger stayed lost, the better it would be for Sickler’s business.
Before setting off on the search, the airboat drivers and TV crew had loaded up on bottled water, sodas, coffee, snacks and sunscreen at Sickler’s souvenir shop. Raven Stark had warned Sickler not to tell a soul that Derek was missing because it might leak to the media and then snoopy reporters would show up. Sickler had sort of agreed to keep his mouth shut. It would be good publicity for the shop if he got his face on the evening news, but for now he was willing to wait.
He was sitting alone, devouring a box of powdered donuts behind the counter, when a burly, unshaven man opened the screen door. The man was too tan to be a tourist. He wore a faded Buffalo Bills jersey, baggy gray gym shorts and soiled sneakers with no laces. His hair was matted, and his eyes were red-rimmed and oozy.
“Can I help you?” Sickler asked.
“I believe so.”
“You look thirsty, sport. Want a soda?”
“Beer,” the man said.
“Sure.”
“In a bottle, if you got one.”
“Absolutely.”
“Is that real or fake?” The man pointed at the bleached skull of a fox that was displayed on a pine shelf above the microwave.
“Course it’s real.” Sickler managed to sound indignant. “Shot it myself,” he said, which was a lie. “It’s yours for forty bucks.”
“No thanks.”
“How about thirty?”
“How ’bout lettin’ me enjoy my brew?” The man swigged down half the bottle before he spoke again. “I’m tryin’ to find somebody.”
Sickler thought instantly of Derek Badger, but it didn’t add up. The stranger didn’t look like a TV reporter.
“Who’re you lookin’ for? What’s his name?”
“Not he,” the man said. “It’s a she.”
Sickler smiled and licked the sugary dust from another donut. “We don’t get lots of women coming through here, sport. I’m pretty sure I’d remember.”
The man slapped a wallet-sized photograph on the countertop. “She’s not a woman,” he said gruffly. “She’s my daughter.”
It was a school picture of the scrawny girl who’d been hanging around with Derek Badger’s television crew. She looked exactly the same, except that in the photo she didn’t have a black eye.
“She’s real sick,” the man said. “She run off without her medicine.”
“What’s the matter with her?” Sickler asked.
“It’s called Floyd’s disease. She could die from it.”
“Never heard of that one. Floyd’s disease?”
“It’s rare,” the man said. “Only one out of twenty-two million kids get it is what the doctors told us.”
Sickler had seen enough trouble over the years that he wasn’t looking for more. Maybe the stranger was telling the truth, and maybe he wasn’t. In any case, Sickler had no desire to get in the middle of a family hassle.
He pushed the girl’s photograph away. “Sorry. She don’t look familiar.”
“Oh, is that right?” The man lunged across the counter and hissed, “She called me from here, Slim!”
Sickler shoved him back. He was larger than the stranger-at nearly three hundred pounds, he was larger than almost everybody-but he was hopelessly out of shape. That’s why he kept a claw hammer behind the counter.
He took it out and said, “Settle down, sport.”
The man raised his hands apologetically. “Sorry, buddy. I just gotta find her, that’s all, before she goes into a coma or somethin’. You can put that hammer away; I won’t make no trouble.”
Sickler didn’t put it away. He said, “We get lots of tourists come in off the highway to borrow the phone when their cell batteries go dead. I don’t pay attention to what they look like, or their kids.”
“She’s not a tourist.”
The shop owner didn’t like that the man had grabbed at him, or the meanness in the man’s eyes. The “Slim” wisecrack was out of line, too.
“I told you-the girl don’t look familiar. Now I got work to do, so be on your way.”
“Hold on-”
“But first, pay for the beer.” Sickler tapped the claw hammer on the countertop. “Four bucks even.”
The stranger thumbed out the cash from a grimy wad. “Her name’s Tuna.”
“Tina?”
“No. Tuna.”
“Like the fish?”
“She said on the phone she was in Aruba,” the man said, “making lists of moths and butterflies. She told me not to worry, said she hitched a ride on a sailboat with some circus folks.”
“Aruba?” Sickler laughed. “That’s quite a story.”
“Thing is, I got caller ID on my cell. That’s how I know for a fact she was here.”
Oh great, Sickler thought.
“The name of this place came up on my phone when she called,” the man went on. “I looked up your address on the Internet, and here I am.”
Sickler wasn’t ever going to admit that he knew the girl, or that he’d charged her two bucks to use his office phone. “What time did she call you?”
“An hour ago,” the stranger said. He checked his watch. “Make it one hour and eleven minutes.”
“Whatever.” Sickler shrugged. “I wasn’t here; I was over in Naples. But I’ll ask the lady who watches the shop for me, see if she recalls seein’ the girl. That’s the best I can do.”
“I’ll leave her picture with you,” the man said. “Hey, is that your motor coach parked outside? The big black number with tinted windows?”
“Sure is,” Sickler lied again.
“Sweet. How much that bad boy set you back?”
“You don’t wanna know.”
“I got a Winnebago Chieftain that’s seen better days. Lucky I don’t have to drive it far.”
Sickler said, “Hey, tell me somethin’.”
“Sure.”
“Why would this girl-”
“My daughter,” the stranger interjected.
“Why would she call to say she’s in Aruba if she ain’t? Why the heck would she lie about somethin’ like that