by V. B. Larson
He looked from one to the other of them. “Did I miss something?”
“I’ll tell you later,” said Vasquez.
Out in the orchard, less than a mile from the house, Spurlock and Ingles worked to rid themselves of Ray.
“All right, now we’ve got him all trussed up like a chicken,” said Spurlock. He laughed. “A big, foil-wrapped chicken. Now what?”
“We’ll put him back in the pickup and cart him away from here,” suggested Ingles.
“But what-” Spurlock began then broke off as a car passed by beyond the almond trees. He watched its blurred shape cautiously. He pointed toward the car. “Is there a road just over there?”
“Yes, but there’s never much traffic,” said Ingles. “It’s a dead end. Only goes down to a few farms and then stops.”
“Okay, back to Vance,” said Spurlock, “I can’t drive him far in the back of this pickup. Even if we cover him, he’ll flop around when he comes to and attract attention. He might even be awake now, faking us. I didn’t hit him that hard.”
“I’ve got a camper shell back in the garage. My plan is to put it on the truck and that should solve the problem.”
Spurlock shook his head again. “No, I don’t think so, I don’t want to go back to the house right now. The place seems too hot to me. I want to get out of here.”
Ingles opened his mouth to continue the argument, but then the big car out on the road came back by again, traveling more slowly this time. It was the same large, white vehicle. Ingles and Spurlock watched it slow to a stop, then begin backing up.
“Cop,” said Spurlock with certainty. “C’mon, let’s get King Tut here into the back.” Heaving together, they lifted Vance over the edge and rolled him into the bed of the truck. Ingles limped into the driver’s seat and Spurlock scrambled into the cab on the passenger side.
“Give you a dollar to a pound of shit that he’s comin’ down this dirt track of yours to see what we’re up to. Told you this place was too fucking hot to hang around.”
Ingles didn’t bother to argue, but rather fired up the Ranger and ground the gears. Every time he shifted, more sweat popped up on his forehead. He pulled the Ranger off the canal bank and bounced down into the green gloom of the almond trees. Spurlock watched him and he knew something about wounds. That foot was going to get worse. It was going to get to where Ingles couldn’t walk and probably couldn’t drive. That meant Ingles was fast becoming useless, as far as Spurlock was concerned.
“I don’t see any lights on it,” said Spurlock, craning his neck to look out the back window.
“Maybe it’s unmarked.”
“He’s coming down the track, I think he’s reached the pump house. Huh.”
“What?”
“The car, it’s a Lincoln. A real big one. They don’t give those to cops.”
Ingles looked at him. “A Lincoln Towncar?”
“Yeah.”
Ingles stomped on the brakes and did a tight U-turn in between the trees. He headed back to the pump house.
“What the hell are you doing?” demanded Spurlock. “It might be FBI or some other kind of Fed.”
By then it was too late, as the guy in the Lincoln had to have seen them by now. Spurlock had visions of Feds and bars and filthy toilets without lids. The Lincoln was trying to turn around, but the trees and the vast, boat-like length of the car were inhibiting him. Sand and gravel spit out from the beneath the car.
“Huh. Looks like he’s trying to run from us. You know this guy, Ingles?”
“Indeed, I do.”
By the time the driver had gotten the car turned around and pointed back toward the main road, the silver Ranger pulled out of the trees and blocked his path. A very surprised John Nogatakei climbed slowly out from behind the wheel of his Lincoln.
Ray awakened groggily. A thousand aches and pains assaulted his senses. The most irritating of which happened to be a left shoulder. It seemed bent and locked in an uncomfortable position, almost dislocated. He squirmed, but was only partly able to relieve the pain. Something resisted his every movement. It was difficult to get air into his lungs, the feeling of suffocation was horrible. It sat on his chest like a living thing. Panic reared its leering head and he had to fight to control himself. He believed for a few moments that he was in a sleeping bag, or perhaps a blanket. But it was much tighter than that. Even his face was wrapped up, leaving only a hole or two over his nostrils and a narrow slit over his right eye. He heard conversation, but couldn’t turn his head toward it.
He lay back, tried to breathe evenly. At least he was still alive. He rolled his one eye this way and that, taking in what he could. He seemed to be laying on hard, ribbed surface under the open sky. He smelled dust, oil and hot engine. The bed of a pickup? He could only guess.
A door crumped. Then second one followed. Ray felt a shimmer run through the truck bed beneath him. “If that’s a cop, he needs to lay off the donuts,” remarked the voice of the man who had pistol-whipped him. What had Ingles called him? Spurlock.
“Ingles, I’m glad I found you,” said Nog’s voice with a nervous laugh. Ray tried not to react. He appeared to have awakened into a meeting of conspirators. Instantly, Ray suspected that Nog had led him into all this. But then, if it had all been a setup, why had Ingles let two of his toes get blown off before calling in Spurlock?
“You know this geek?” demanded Spurlock.
“Indeed. Spurlock, meet John Nogatakei, otherwise known as Nog. Nog, Mr. Spurlock.”
“Who is this guy?” asked Spurlock.
“Nog is the brilliant creator of the virus that started this whole adventure.”
“Then I ought to blow his ugly face off right now,” complained Spurlock. “So Nog, if you’re our buddy, how come you tried to take off when you saw us?”
“I–I wasn’t sure who you were,” stammered Nog. “I came down this back road to avoid running into anyone.”
“Nog, we weren’t to have any further contact,” said Ingles. “To what do I owe this pleasure?”
“We have to talk, Ingles,” replied Nog, “privately.”
“What we have to do,” growled Spurlock, “is get the fuck out of Dodge, man!” Ray thought he heard the men grapple one another briefly. There was a scuffling sound in the dirt and someone fell against the side of the pickup, making it rock on its springs.
Nog’s voice came next, and it sounded closer and higher pitched, perhaps on the edge of panic. Ray surmised that Spurlock had grabbed him and thrown him against the pickup.
“Wait a minute, man! I’m on your side! I-” he broke off here as a series of thudding sounds commenced. Nog shrieked and Ray quailed as a shadow loomed over his limited field of vision. Nog’s face, twisted in pain, doubled over the side of the pickup bed. Nog and he made eye contact-Ray’s one wide, staring eye meeting Nog’s own grimacing glance. Nog registered the shock of recognition, then pain as more blows sounded behind him.
“I’ll find your kidneys in all this blubber somewhere, punk,” growled Spurlock.
“That’s quite enough, Mr. Spurlock,” said Ingles.
“Well, what the fuck are we supposed to do with this whale? For all we know he’s just led the posse right to us! We’ve got to get out of here, man!”
“Beating our co-conspirator serves no purpose, Mr. Spurlock,” said Ingles. “He has after all, provided us with an answer to our dilemma concerning Vance.”
“You mean the Lincoln?”
“Precisely. That trunk will provide ample room for transporting our mummified cargo.”
“Huh,” said Spurlock. “I suppose you’re right, but I still don’t trust this frigging nerd.”There came another thump that shivered the truck again. Nog lurched in pain and Ray figured he had just been kicked in the rear. Ray realized right then that Nog must have come back to look for him. He must have wondered what had happened. He felt a pang of regret for Nog’s predicament, despite everything.
More sounds of doors crumping open and close
d came to Ray. Nog looked down at him. Ray watched the man worry at his tongue, and somehow, this time, the sight didn’t sicken him.
“I’m sorry, Vance,” Nog whispered.
Ray blinked his eye. It was all he could do to respond.
Nog looked over his shoulder, then back down at Ray. “I’ll do what I can,” he hissed.
Then he was gone, and all Ray could see was the blue sky with drifting clouds of gray and white.
… 25 Hours and Counting..
Spurlock and Ingles had no sooner loaded Vance into the trunk of the Lincoln and slammed down the lid than they heard the big car thrum into life.
“What the fu-?” demanded Spurlock, but his voice was drowned out by the roar of the big white car’s engine. It spit a cloud of dust and gravel into their legs and half-bounced, half-rolled off the canal embankment.
“He’s running!” shouted Ingles as he limped for the open door of the Ranger. As Nog skimmed past the pickup, the Lincoln scraped the rear bumper with a screech of metal on metal. The car plunged into the almond trees like a submerging whale.
Ingles had the pickup going in seconds. He almost backed over Spurlock, who grabbed the open passenger door as it flew by and swung himself into the cab.
“I’m gonna kill that fat bastard!” he screamed at Ingles. “Don’t even get in my way this time!”
Ingles saved his breath for driving. He barely missed a thick black trunk as he swung the Ranger around and popped it into second. They both rammed their heads into the ceiling as he revved it over the uneven ground.
“Get out that popgun of yours,” suggested Ingles.
“I can’t hit anything from a distance,” shouted back Spurlock.
“Just try to nail a tire when we catch up. He can’t outrun us on rough ground.”
Spurlock nodded and rolled down his window. He slipped his pistol into his hand.
Nog surprised them all, however, by pulling a U-turn in the middle of the orchard. He chose a spot for the manuever where three trees were missing. Only dark wounds showed where the trees had been uprooted and removed like rotten teeth. The open sky showed above; a brief streak of bright blue that tore through the otherwise seamless green canopy.
“A storm blew those out last winter,” remarked Ingles unconcernedly, even as he hand-over-hand whipped the steering wheel around and back again. Spurlock frowned at him, unsure how he could be so cool in such a situation.
“He’s trying to get back to the main road, where he can pour it on,” shouted Spurlock.
The chase doubled back to the canal embankment. It was there that Nog made a fatal error. He tried to cut a sharp turn just as he crested the embankment. The car lurched up and veered right, toward the main road, but didn’t make the turn. Instead, it slid sideways toward the canal and over the edge. The big white Lincoln rolled over like a dying whale and crashed down into the slime and filth at the bottom of the concrete walls.
Ingles and Spurlock pulled up in the Ranger and walked to the edge.
“He’s been thrown out and crushed,” said Spurlock, panting, “smashed like a bug under that big boat. Splat! Ha! Ha! Game over, Nog!”
“Should have worn his seatbelt,” commented Ingles. The two of them returned to the idling Ranger and climbed in.
“What now?”asked Spurlock.
“It seems that Nog has mistakenly handed us a golden opportunity.”
“How’s that?”
“He had written a virus, which Vance discovered,” began Ingles with the air of one relating a news story. “Upon being confronted, Nog struck Vance unconscious, taped him up and prepared to flee the area. Unfortunately, he took a bad turn into the canal.”
“What about Vance? He’s probably alive in there.”
“Possibly, but not for long.”
“Are you saying you want me to pop him?” asked Spurlock, hefting his pistol doubtfully.
“No, no. Bullet wounds are too hard to explain. I was thinking of the irrigation of the local fields. If I, or another local grower, were to place an order for water tonight…”
“Ha! He’ll drown in that trunk like a boxed rat!”
“Exactly,” said Ingles. He put the truck in gear and they headed for the main road.
When they reached it and began driving, Spurlock heaved a sigh and began thinking. His head started hurting again, worse than before. Coming down from an adrenalin rush left him low again, lower than ever.
“Shit,” he said, pushing his thumb into him temples, then against his brow.
He glanced over at Ingles. The guy was a cool customer, there was no doubt of it. He was sweating and pale and everytime he worked the clutch pedal with his damaged foot, he winced, but otherwise you would never know the guy was in agony. Spurlock knew from experience that wounds always got worse when they had enough time to swell up and throb.
“Where are we headed now?” Spurlock asked.
“I plan to drop you at the bus station with enough cash to make it out of town.”
Spurlock blinked back his pounding head and tried to think. “Okay, what about my money? Give me the locker number.”
Ingles inclined his head. “Locker number 4393,” he said evenly. He passed over a key with an orange plastic handle on it. Stamped on the key were the digits 4393.
Spurlock looked at it, then slid his eyes back to Ingles. “Where are you headed?”
“The Sacramento airport, of course. Delta flight 953 to Salt Lake City is waiting for me.”
Spurlock nodded. “You’re sure that this key goes to airport lockers in San Fran?”
“American Airlines terminal, lower level,” said Ingles.
“How ‘bout you drop me off in San Fran, and maybe even come in with me to find the locker?”
Ingles shook his head. “Your paranoia is admirable, sir, but I don’t have the time. My flight is leaving. As it is, I need to see a doctor friend about this foot of mine.”
Spurlock looked down at the foot. A thread of dark blood had oozed out of the shoe to stain the truck’s dusty carpet.
“Oh yeah,” he said, “You mean this foot?”Then with a quick motion he reached out and brought his boot heel down on Ingles toes. Or rather, where his toes had been.
Ingles whooped and the car lurched wildly. Spurlock was ready for that. He grabbed the wheel and kept the truck on the road.
He threw the locker key at Ingles and shoved the gun into the man’s cheek. “Why are you trying to fuck me, man?”
Ingles gargled and blinked, still recovering from the shock of pain.
“Why? Huh? What is this, everybody hump Spurlock week?” he demanded. His head throbbed, but the burning almost felt good.
“What is the — ” croaked out Ingles.
“What’s the matter?” asked Spurlock, “I’ll tell you what the fucking matter is, you piece of shit! There is no locker 4393 at that airport. I checked ahead of time.”
“How do you know-” began Ingles.
Spurlock rammed the gun harder against the other’s head. Ingles was pushed against the truck’s doorframe.
“Because I called them, you asshole! I wanted to know if you were gonna pull any funny shit. They use a five-digit code, with a letter. Where’s this key from, Ingles? Huh? Tell me, I really want to know.”
Ingles glanced at him over the gun without moving his head. Spurlock saw something in his eyes, something that wasn’t quite right. They had eye contact for only a half-second, but Spurlock knew he was in there, still scheming.
The truck, in the meantime had rolled almost to a halt. Ingles pulled it out of gear to keep the engine from dying. He grimaced as he used his injured foot.
“It’s a locker from a ski resort. Dodge Ridge, I believe. It’s up in the Sierras on highway forty-nine.”
“I don’t give a shit where it is!” roared Spurlock. “Where is my DAMNED MONEY?”
Ingles put the car painfully into gear again, then soon shifted into second. “There isn’t any money.”
It was Spurlock’s turn to register shock. “What?” he laughed in disbelief.
“There never was. I’ve been a bit strapped lately, which is partly why I did this whole operation. Primarily, however, I did it all for love,” Ingles snorted. “I suppose it all seems foolish now. I’m sorry to disappoint you.”
Spurlock’s mouth sagged. “You did it all for love?” he echoed in disbelief. “You’re telling me you’re some kind of college faggot with a thing for some freshman boy you can’t have? What, did you have a boner for Nog? What man? Tell me before I blow you away.”
“I assure you, she was female and quite attractive,” replied Ingles. He shifted smoothly into third.
“Stop the truck, man,” Spurlock ordered.
Ingles shifted into fourth.
“Stop the fucking truck man, before I blow your brains out!”
Ingles floored the truck. The engine revved and whined in protest. He turned to Spurlock. “Jump now, or I’ll kill us both,” he said evenly.
“What?” screamed Spurlock. He grappled the wheel, but he didn’t have the leverage, and Ingles just kept accelerating. He tried to force it out of gear, but without the clutch being in, the transmission held firm. He shoved the gun into Ingles’ face.
“Man, I don’t want to do this,” said Spurlock. Ingles looked at him and then back at the road.
“See that telephone pole down the road?” Ingles asked him coolly. “We’re going to hit that in about thirty seconds.”
Hating himself for it, Spurlock squinted through the windshield. The telephone pole grew perceptibly on the horizon. He glanced at the speedometer. They were pushing ninety. A stop sign came and went in a blur. Someone in another pickup honked at them, but it was only a flash of sound and gone.
“Slow down,” said Spurlock. “I can’t jump at ninety.”
Ingles slowed to fifty, but still the telephone pole continued to loom. “That’s it,” he said flatly. “Jump now or die with me.”
Spurlock looked at him. He meant it, that was clear. He thought of bashing him with the pistol, but the rigid way he held the wheel he could swerve hard and roll them right over.