know, the way they go out in California.  But that cellar is sunk in

solid rock.  He had no problem there.  No, hecouldn'tfigure what it

was.'

'Ben and Mary's ghosts.'

'Could be.'

'You sound like you've got more.'

'I do.  Did you know they were imbeciles?'

'You mean crazy?'

'No.  Imbeciles.  It's a pretty ugly story, actually.  It seems that

when the bank called in that mortgage money they had a town meeting

about it.  See, all Ben knew was farming, and he was pretty bad at

that.  But there was no possibility of either of them doing anything

else for a living.  So somebody came up with the bright idea of having

the town pay off the mortgage.  It was only a little over a thousand.

And they figured it would cost them a whole lot more than that just in

bookkeeping and whatnot to keep them on the dole for thirty, maybe

forty, years than it would to pay off and let them keep the place.

'But the upshot was that somebody got cheap about it, I guess, so the

proposal was turned down.  And it looked like Dead River was going into

the social welfare business for a while.  Very exciting.  But then, of

course, Ben and Mary disappeared and saved everybody the trouble.'

'Imbeciles, huh?'

'Total morons.  Ben couldn't read and couldn't write.  He could handle

a plow and Mary could wring a chicken's neck and that was about the

whole of it.  Now, where do you go if you're that stupid?  That's the

next question.  How do you manage disappearing?'

'You could die.'

'That would be the easy way, yes.'

'Or just wander off.  A county or two down the line.'

'Or you could do what my boss did and open a garage.'

'You could do that.'

He pushed the empty glass away from him and his smile was sly, a little

boozy.  His hands waved apparitions in the space around us.

'Or maybe you just go back into the caves,' he said.  'And forget about

us entirely.  Maybe you live off fish and weeds and spend your days

listening to the gulls and the wind off the sea, and you don't come

out, not ever.'

'Jesus, Rafferty.'

I felt a slight prickling at the base of my neck.  He looked at me and

the smile grew even more cagey and ironic, like a cop in a morgue

uncovering a cadaver.

'That doctor.  I wonder if he ever heard dogs barking.'

I decided a few days later that Rafferty's sense of humor was

Maybe it was the tourists turning up so early this year because of the

good weather- they could breed a bitter irony in you made up of easy

money and bad manners, privilege and your own unquestionable need.  One

day I saw a fat man in sunglasses and fishing tackle and drinking

eggnog right out of the carton.

It was pretty sickening.

Then that same day Rafferty tells me this story about some woman over

in Portland who was suing an Italian spaghetti-sauce company for mental

anguish because she opened a can of marinara and found a woman's finger

inside a rubber glove pointing fingernail-up at her.

The next day he had another one.

I I j I 'j.  He d read it in the paper.

The body of a night watchman had been found in a hog pen at a

meat-packing firm on the South Side of Chicago.  It had been partly

eaten by the hogs.  There were hundreds of them in the pen, and the

guy's face and abdomen were in pretty bad shape.  But here's the

kicker.

His clothes were hanging neatly on a nearby fence.

Rafferty made some nasty obvious comments about going after pigs in the

dark.

So I thought he was getting strange lately.

But maybe it wasn't him entirely.

Sometimes I think there's something just hanging in the air, and a I

most everybody reacts to it.  Don't ask me why.  Sometimes it's real

and vital, like when JFK was shot.  And sometimes it's completely

unimportant, like pennant fever.  Sometimes, like the recession, it

goes on and on, and you get so you hardly even notice it.  Maybe Dead

River was getting a touch of that.

And I'll tell you why I think it wasn't just Rafferty.

There was us.

The stealing.  All the dumb, reckless things we were doing.  The

business with Steven.  The stolen car.  There was my own blind,

self-destructive urgetofollowalong, no matter what kind of ridiculous

thing they were into doing.

There was a statue of a mounted revolutionary soldier in the town

square.  One night we painted the horse's balls bright red.  Two nights

later we painted them blue.

We were sitting on the beach one afternoon, and Casey was in the water-

it had grown warmer by then, though it was still too cold for me. Steve

was still nursing his torn hand, so he'd stayed home that day, so there

was just me and Kim sitting there alone together, watching her, and we

got to talking about Steve's accident- we called it an accident now-in

a boring sort of way.  The stitches, when they were due out, to what

degree he could flex the damn thing.  We were remembering how it had

been that day without ever once coming close to the heart of the thing,

which was why she'd done it.  We skirted that.

But I guess it made her think of this other story, which I'm mentioning

here because it bears upon what I was saying about something being in

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