by R. P. Gannon
I said, “Ahh …” I wanted to tell him he didn’t have to do that, but Ralph ignored me. Ralph was on a mission. It still didn’t look right to Ralph, so he added another handful of turkey.
Then Ralph turned to me and said, “You get one additional choice of meat, free of charge.”
My mouth dropped open, “Huh?” Ralph waited patiently. “Ham,” I said.
Ralph added a large handful of ham to the already bulging sandwich. Then he stood back and smiled at his creation. He had executed his orders. The sub sat proudly on the butcher block counter. “How’s that,” Ralph asked.
“It’s ahhh … it’s fine,” I said. Ralph wrapped it with pride, and put a sticker on it with the regular price of a large turkey sub.
Ralph handed it to me. “There you are,” he said, a big smile on his face.
“Thank you,” I said. The sandwich weighed about three pounds. I headed for the checkout. I thought for sure somebody would question the price and Ralph would be in trouble, but nobody noticed. I figured it would take about three days to eat the whole sandwich. I decided I wouldn’t buy any more sandwiches at that deli if Ralph was on duty. One more of Ralph’s sandwiches would bankrupt the store. We already had a lot of empty storefronts. No sense adding another.
I gassed up the Wrangler on the way home. I was ready for tonight’s job at Ransom’s.
I hoped Senator Buckland was photogenic
Chapter Eight
WILLEY AND I spent the afternoon in my carport waiting for the sun to go down.
“What about Oscar?” I asked Willey. “What are we going to do with him tonight?”
“We’ll take him with us,” Willey said. “He won’t be any trouble.” I wasn’t too sure about that, but I let it go.
It was almost seven-thirty and the sun was low on the horizon when Willey said, “I’ll go get Oscar and we’ll get going. We should be there early in case they make the payoff earlier than eight thirty.” He was back in a few minutes with Oscar in tow. I rubbed Oscar’s little head and we put him in the back seat. As we neared the front entrance of the park I was marveling at the park’s sign, a Blue Orchid on a white background, under the words, “The Blue Orchid.” And below that, “Mobile Home Park.”
“Look, Barney,” Willey said, pointing. There were wooden stakes driven into the ground and spray painted with day-glow orange paint.
“Damn,” I said. “They’re already surveying for the sale. They’re not wasting any time, are they?”
Willey said, “After we get these pictures tonight, those stakes will be pulled up and the sale will come to a grinding halt.” We drove in silence the rest of the way. Both of us lost in our thoughts. We went down 19 South to largo and made our way to Ransom’s Restaurant. It was just getting dark as we pulled into the front parking lot. The function room was on the first floor on the right side of the restaurant. A driveway off the front parking lot wound around the right side of the restaurant to the function room parking lot. There were a lot of good sized bushes on the strip of land between the parking lots that would give us plenty of cover.
“When the lawyer and Senator Buckland come out we’ll get the pictures we need,” I said. We sat in the Wrangler and waited. At eight-twenty it was starting to get dark. We went to hide in the bushes. I had the camera and Willey had Oscar by the hand. We were afraid if we left him in the Wrangler he might get bored and raise a ruckus. The lawyer’s Lincoln was parked facing the bushes where we were hiding.
We didn’t have long to wait. The lawyer and the Senator came out the side door and got into the Lincoln.
“That’s Snydely, the lawyer that threatened us,” Willey said. I nodded. The spotlights on the building threw enough light that I would have no trouble getting good shots, even without a flash. I was ready.
Snydely and Buckland talked for a while inside the car, then Snydely reached into his inside coat pocket. I got a good shot of Buckland watching in anticipation. Snydely pulled out the envelope—another perfect shot. The camera whirred as it pulled up each new frame. Buckland reached out and took the envelope in his hand, another shot. Then he slid the envelope into his inside coat pocket—still another perfect shot. That was it. We had what we needed and it had gone smoothly. I smiled and got ready for one last shot as they went back inside.
That was when either fate or senility stepped in. For one split second I let my mind slide from what I was doing, and I switched the camera’s flash to ON!
Click … the whole world lit up like high noon! The good Senator and Snydely looked stunned.
“Lets boogie,” Willey yelled and took off toward the Wrangler, his left hand had a death grip on Oscar’s hand. Oscar chirped, “Ee, ee, ee,” in complaint. I was right behind them. As we jumped into the Wrangler, we could hear the Lincoln starting up. By the time we hit the street the Lincoln’s lights were behind us. I could see Buckland in my rear view mirror—he looked like he was having a fit.
They rammed into the Wrangler’s rear bumper and sent us into a skid, but I was able to recover, though the Wrangler rocked like a carnival ride. I cut through a corner gas station, but the Lincoln stayed right behind us. My Wrangler couldn’t outrun them. I pulled the handle back and put the Wrangler into four wheel drive.
“This is our only chance,” I yelled at Willey.
“Then do it,” Willey yelled back. I swung the wheel hard to the right, just as a bullet ripped through the soft top. Oscar dived for the floor. We drove into the wild brush and ripped through shrubbery. The Wrangler bounced violently. We hadn’t had time to fasten our seatbelts. I had the steering wheel to hold onto but Willey was bouncing like a jack-in-the-box. He bounced so high his head hit the metal crossbar, and he fell back into his seat, unconscious. The Lincoln was no longer behind us, so I stopped and turned the lights off. The darkness covered us.
“Willey, are you okay,” no answer. “Willey!” I shook his shoulder—nothing. I took my gun out of my pocket and opened my door. I stepped out into the brush with my gun in hand. No sign of the Lincoln. It must have gotten hung up on the brush—too low to the ground. I went around to Willey’s side and opened the door. Willey almost fell out. I pushed him back inside. He was still unconscious. “Willey, wake up!” I shook him again. He started to come around.
Finally, his eyes opened. “What happened?” he asked.
“You hit your head on the crossbar and got knocked out. For a while I thought you were dead.”
He was still groggy. “My head hurts.” He gently patted the top of his head.
“What happened to Snydely and Buckland,” he asked.
“I think they’re back there in the bushes.” I fastened Willey’s seatbelt and ran around and jumped in behind the wheel. “We have to get out of here,” I said. “They might come after us on foot.” I started the engine, fastened my own seatbelt, and we lurched off into the brush again. I looked in the rear view mirror. There were no headlights behind us.
We hadn’t gone far when Willey yelled, “Look out!” Out of the darkness a
Palmetto tree loomed ahead of us. I swung the wheel just in time to miss it.
“Didn’t you see that tree?” Willey asked.
“No,” I said. “My eyesight must be getting worse.”
“There’s head lights moving over there,” Willey pointed. “It must be a road.” I turned in that direction, and got hung up on a stump. I turned the lights off again and turned off the engine. We listened to the silence. I was hoping to hear a siren. Don’t people report gun shots anymore?
“Why in hell did you use the flash back at the restaurant?” Willey asked.
“It was just a slip,” I said. “A knee jerk reaction.”
“You got the jerk part right,” he said, rubbing his head. “Where’s Oscar? Oscar, where are you?” Willey yelled. Oscar popped his head up from the back seat and gave us a look that told us he wasn’t happy with the way the night was progressing.
I handed my gun to Willey and started the engine. “Hold on
to that,” I said.
“Where’d you get this?”
“I bought it at Sammy’s Rod and Gun. It’s loaded so be careful with it, but use it if we need to.” I rocked the Wrangler off the stump and we headed for the road. When we reached the road we held back in the bushes. I turned the lights off again and we crept towards the pavement. We sat there and looked around.
“What do you think, Barney? Are they out there waiting for us to show ourselves?”
“I guess we’ll have to make a run for it,” I Said. I took the Wrangler out of four wheel drive, turned the lights back on and we ran for the road. We raced up the road as fast as the little Wrangler would go.
As we approached an on ramp, Willey said, “Take that ramp, Barney, and get up on the highway.” We raced up the ramp. There were no headlights behind us. We drove for a mile, and took the next exit. We turned into a Burger King Parking lot and went as far back in the lot as we could. I turned off the lights and the engine, and we breathed a sigh of relief.
We got out and looked at the bullet holes. The bullet had come through the canvas on the driver’s side and exited on the passenger side.
“If we hadn’t turned just when we did, that bullet would have come through the back window, and could have killed one of us,” I said. “These guys are dangerous.”
“What now?” Willey asked. “We can’t go back to the park. They’ll be waiting for us there. They know who we are and where we live.”
I said, “Maybe we should call the police.”
“I don’t think that’s a good idea, Barney. Then we’d have to tell them about the nursing home and Eduardo.”
I thought about the old man in the trash compactor. “I guess you’re right.”
“Besides,” Willey said, “I forgot to tell you, Eduardo said if we got caught he’d have to say he didn’t know us.”
“What! You forgot to tell me something as important as that?”
Willey said, “Well, I was afraid if you knew you’d chicken out.”
“Damn right I would. That makes us common criminals.” No wonder our checks from Eduardo were made out to “Bearer.” I had counted on Eduardo to protect us. Now we were on our own. My head was spinning. Where could we go? We couldn’t even move to an empty unit in the park. It would be too dangerous now. And now we didn’t have Eduardo to back us up.
“Do you have any idea where we can live now?” I asked Willey.
Willey thought for a while. “How about the Green Swamp? Nobody would look for us there.”
“How can we live in a swamp that’s full of snakes and alligators and bugs?”
“I used to do it when I was a kid,” Willey said. “There’s a few screened in chickees they built for campers. They’re up off the ground so you don’t get snakes and gators and stuff coming in. And we’d just get a couple of cans of bug spray so the bugs won’t bother us.”
“Okay,” I said, giving up. “let’s go get what we need so we can get set up and get some sleep tonight.” It was going to be a long night.
Thanks to Eduardo we had enough money to buy what we needed. We stopped at a mall to pick up what equipment we needed to camp out. Oscar was alone in the Wrangler, so we were rushing. Willey came down the aisle carrying a large box. On the front of the box was printed, “Inflatable Rubber Raft.”
“Why do we need a raft?“I asked.
“Because the only way to get across the swamp is by water. Go get some bug spray and I’ll get some sleeping bags.”
We made another stop for food and water, then we headed for what Willey called, “The Jane Green swamp.”
As we drove, Willey told me some of the swamp’s history. “It was always called The Green Swamp, but in the early fifties a woman named Jane Richardson sort of became the swamp’s conservator. Then it became the Jane Green swamp.
But then there’s a juicier story about a group of folks who went into the swamp on a day’s outing, probably nature lovers. The story goes that a young lady named, Jane wandered off by herself, must have gone off to pee. Anyway, after a while they heard her scream. They ran in the direction of the screams but before they could find her, the screaming stopped. They looked and looked, but they didn’t find her. They thought she got grabbed by a gator.”
The hair on the back of my neck was standing up, but Willey wasn’t finished yet. “You know how gators kill their prey, don’t you. They drag it into the water and start spinning around and around until it drowns … pull in there,” Willey said, pointing to an opening in the brush on the side of the road. I missed the turn and nearly went off the road. I turned around and drove through the opening toward the swamp on an overgrown path. I didn’t want to go into that swamp, but I had no choice. If we stayed in a motel there was a chance Flaherty’s hoods would find us.
We drove down a narrow trail that led deep into the bush. The trail ended at a clearing at the edge of the water. We got out and sprayed ourselves with bug spray. Oscar would have none of it. Then we started to unpack the Wrangler. Willey opened the box and pulled out the rolled up rubber raft. He unscrewed the tops of the containers for the compressed air cylinders, put a cylinder into each, and screwed the caps back on. “Here goes,” he said and pulled the cords on the containers. The raft began to hiss like a hundred snakes.
It hissed and flopped around like a living thing. Oscar hid behind the Wrangler. When it finally stopped gyrating, there on the ground was an inflated, full sized rubber raft. I pulled the Wrangler into the brush in an attempt to hide it. Then we slid the raft into the water and started loading our supplies into it. We put Oscar up front and Willey and I climbed into the back. We picked up our paddles and shoved off into the darkness. I didn’t like abandoning the Wrangler, but we had no choice.
“Are there still alligators in this swamp?” I asked.
“Of course there’s still alligators,” Willey said.
“Are there still snakes?” Of course there’s still snakes. It’s a swamp.”
I held my hand out, “Give me my gun.” Willey handed it over. I had the feeling he would rather have kept it. I, on the other hand, felt more secure about traveling through a life— threatening swamp in the dark of night, now that I was armed and dangerous. We moved slowly over the black water. The air smelled of rotting vegetation. As we glided under the overhanging limbs of bushes, I kept expecting a snake to drop down my neck. I could barely see the tall grass and bushes that lined the edges of the waterway.
The deep silence was broken only by the swish of our paddles, the muffled sound of wildlife moving through the underbrush, and the croaking of frogs. Once in a while we heard something plop into the water. I didn’t want to think about what caused that sound. Oscar was entranced with the sounds and the smell of the night swamp. The sounds were reaching into the ancient part of his tiny brain where his survival instincts were stored. I realized Oscar was in his natural element, and we were out of ours. There was a clear night sky overhead, and we traveled by faint moonlight. We followed the water trail that snaked through the swamp like a giant serpent.
The bug spray was doing its job. I could hear the mosquitoes buzzing around me, but they weren’t biting. I couldn’t help but wonder what the Indians and the early settlers would have given for a can of bug spray.
I noticed that the raft was turning to the left.
“Willey, are you still paddling?” Silence. “Willey what are you doing?” In the darkness I could see Willey slumped over, not moving. “Willey are you okay?”
Oscar seemed to know there was something wrong. He started chirping, “Ee, ee, ee.” I put my paddle down and was leaning over to shake Willey, when he seemed to come to life again. “Willey, are you okay?”
“I think so,” Willey said. “I must have passed out for a minute.”
“Let’s turn the raft around,” I said. “You’re going to a hospital to be checked out. You hit your head pretty hard. You might have a concussion.”
“You think so?”
“We c
an’t take any chances with you passing out like that.” We turned the raft around and started paddling back.
“You know, Barney,” Willey said. “It was the strangest thing. “I dreamed we were coming back through the swamp, like we’re doing now, but we were in the Wrangler and we were going backwards as fast as we could. Because three large alligators were chasing us and biting at the wheels. But the worst part was, Snydely was sitting on the hood of the Wrangler with a gun. When he pointed the gun at you and pulled the trigger, I woke up.”
“Are you sure he pointed the gun at me and not at you?” I asked.
“I’m positive. Because I wasn’t really there. I wasn’t myself in the dream. I was somebody else.”
“Right, keep paddling.” I had to get him to a hospital before he started thinking he was Eleanor Roosevelt. After a half-hour of paddling we came around a bend and Willey said, “There’s the Wrangler.” Just then the Wrangler appeared out of the darkness. There was nothing wrong with his eyesight. We turned into shore and pulled the raft out of the water.
“Just leave it there,” I said. “We’ll be back in a few hours.” We all climbed into the Wrangler and Willey gave directions to the nearest hospital. Willey was unusually quiet. I hoped he wasn’t going to pass out again.
Twenty minutes later we were walking into an emergency room. We had to leave Oscar in the Wrangler. The emergency room was crowded. It looked like the losers from every bar fight in Florida were there. Willey showed his Medicare card and filled out some forms.
A nurse came over to Willey and shined a flashlight into his eyes. “You don’t seem to have a concussion, Mister Pulaski, but the doctor will see you as soon as he can. Please take a seat.”
Three hours later I had checked on Oscar three times and had picked up a few words of Spanish, but we still hadn’t seen the doctor. Willey was still being quiet. That worried me. Willey was never quiet for long.