Snapper

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Snapper Page 12

by Felicia Zekauskas


  “JJ, again, I hope you don’t mind, but I need to get photos of this. Could you please position yourself alongside the scratches on the canoe.”

  JJ understood immediately. You didn’t need to be a forensics expert to see that the marks on the canoe and those on JJ’s torso were identical.

  “Well,” said Chief Rudolph. “We’ve got ourselves a match.”

  * * * *

  It was strange being back. It was strange to be sleeping again in the cabin that his father and grandfather had built. And it was even stranger to think that the same monster that had mutilated his grandfather might still be alive and at large in Turtleback Lake.

  Ever since he’d visited the cabin back in the summer, August had felt something pulling him back. And now, sure enough, here he was: back.

  Back then – when was it – late June, early July? – August had let himself go too far with Deena. He should have left after their first bottle of wine. After their second, Deena had gone to the window and lowered the blinds, as if she didn’t want the moon to look in. Then she had gone to the couch and patted the cushion next to her seductively.

  August had tried to resist. He wanted Deena, but he knew it wasn’t right. There had been times when, as a professor, he had felt similarly seduced by graduate or doctoral students. But he had always resisted. And now, maybe because Deena had shown him her dissertation, he viewed her as if she, too, were a student. It didn’t matter that she was more-than-of-age and more-than-consenting. She was offering herself to him for the wrong reasons – because of his credentials and because she’d drunk too much. The fact was they’d both drunk too much.

  The whole thing made August recall another incident he deeply regretted. It was something so bizarre and so out of character that August often tried to convince himself that it had never really happened.

  It had been a late summer afternoon, probably fourteen or fifteen years ago now, and August had fallen asleep after swimming out to the floating dock. Suddenly the dock was jarred. Something had rammed against it. August woke with a start and looked around. A small sailboat was rocking alongside.

  “Hi!” said a woman in the boat. August looked at her. She was blonde and very pretty, but there was also something wild, even crazy, about her eyes. All she was wearing was a pair of white shorts and a pink bikini top.

  “Can I join you on your little isle for awhile?” she asked, already climbing up onto the dock.

  August was caught completely off guard.

  “Sure,” he said, not knowing quite what to say. “Why not?”

  Before August even knew what was happening, the woman had climbed on top of him and was straddling his hips. Then she began loosening her bikini top.

  “Hey – wait a minute,” said August. “What are you doing?”

  But before August could say another word, the woman’s mouth was on his. Her lips were sweet and wet. August sighed and surrendered.

  A few minutes later, the woman rolled off him.

  “Well,” she said. “I guess I can cross that off my list.”

  “Your list?” said August.

  “Yes,” she said. “My list. You mean you don’t have one?”

  Then she turned and climbed back down into her boat. August didn’t know her name and she hadn’t asked for his. As she sailed away, she never once turned around.

  August never mentioned the incident to anyone. He liked to pretend it had never happened. But he knew it had. Sometimes he even thought it was the reason he chose to stay away from Turtleback Lake.

  His one night with Deena had brought back the whole memory. But what could he do or say? There was no turning back the clock. And in this case – with the wine, the moonlight, and Deena’s recumbent body laying on the couch with her half unbuttoned blouse – it all had been too much.

  *

  It was the middle of the night – the middle of August’s first night sleeping in the cabin. He had left his window open to let in the cool night air.

  August wasn’t sure whether the loud crack he heard – the blast – was real or a dream. August always had vivid dreams when he slept somewhere new or different and the dream he’d been having was beyond vivid – it bordered on nightmarish.

  August had been in a lab, strapped down to a cold examination table. Electrodes, taped to his abdomen, were connected to a monitor that August could see by raising his head. He watched a dome-shaped light move restlessly back and forth across the bottom of the screen, like a creature scavenging the seabed. As it moved, it blinked and beeped softly.

  Then the dome-shaped light began to rise. It caromed from one side to the other, each ricochet sending it closer to the top of the monitor. As it rose, it began to flash brighter and beep louder. Now for the first time August could see there was another light on the screen, bobbing up near the top. Suddenly the dome-shaped light seemed to zero in on it. Beeping wildly, it shot like a heat-seeking missile straight toward the bobbing light. A second later it engulfed it and then burst with a blast into tiny sparks that rained slowly back down to the bottom of the screen.

  At the sound of the blast, August awoke and sat straight up. The air coming through the window felt cool against the beads of sweat on his brow.

  August threw off the covers and walked over to the window. Standing there, looking out at the moon-glazed lake, he almost imagined he could feel the last vibrations of an echo that had just died in the valley outside. Suddenly the surface of the lake went black. August looked up at the sky. An immense cloud was blotting out the moon.

  August went back to bed. He reached over and turned off the alarm clock. He’d sleep in.

  But at 7:00 a.m., a persistent ring awakened August. Forgetting that he had turned off the alarm clock during the night, he reached over to silence it. But the ringing didn’t stop. Then he realized it was the phone.

  He lifted up the heavy black receiver, the one that Deena had used as a dumbbell.

  “Hello,” he said.

  “August!” said the voice on the other end. “This is Chief Rudolph. Sorry to spoil your first morning back in town, but if you don’t mind, there’s something I’d like you to come see.”

  “Where?” asked August.

  “Down at the town morgue,” answered Chief Rudolph.

  “I’ll be there in twenty minutes,” said August. Then he hung up the phone.

  * * * *

  “So, hot shot,” said Coach Lupo. “You think you’re pretty funny, don’t you?”

  Coach Lupo’s face had never been this close to his before. Kenny wanted to pull his head back, but he didn’t dare. And Lupo’s piercing blue eyes wouldn’t let him look away. Kenny could see all the little red blood vessels branching across Coach Lupo’s eye whites. He could smell the stale coffee on his coach’s breath.

  “It’s funny to mock the way a man walks behind his back, right Lubowsky?”

  Lubowsky felt unable to speak. He could hardly believe what was happening. For three years, Coach Lupo had liked him.

  “I said it’s funny to ridicule a cripple, am I right?”

  Lubowsky tried to shake his head from side to side without taking his eyes off Coach Lupo’s.

  “I want to tell you a little something you don’t know. You think you’re a pretty good halfback, right?”

  Lubowsky said nothing.

  “I said, you think you’re a pretty good halfback, right?”

  Lubowsky made a sound that wasn’t quite a word.

  “Well, let me tell you something. You’re not half the halfback Oscar Hall was when he was a young man. In fact, you’re not an eighth of the halfback he was. So what would that make you? A sixteenth? A thirty-second?”

  Coach Lupo’s face was still too close to his. And now Kenny was having trouble following Coach Lupo’s math.

  “When Oscar Hall was a boy,” continued the coach, “he was faster, stronger, and smarter than you’ll ever be. And he didn’t think he was God’s gift to the world every time he broke a few tackles and
scored. He didn’t make a spectacle of himself with some look-at-me-I’m-the-man shimmy shimmy victory dance. He’d just flip the ball back to the ref, return to the huddle, and get ready to block for the kicker.”

  Coach Lupo paused. Kenny hoped he was finished. But he wasn’t.

  “You, young man, are never going to approach the player he was, let alone the man. So when I see someone like you making a mockery of a man whose shoes you’re not fit to shine, well, it kind of makes me want to puke. How about you, Lubowsky? Doesn’t it kind of make you want to puke, too?”

  Suddenly, Kenny did feel like puking. And it was coming up from inside of him faster than he could stop it. For a brief instant, his cheeks bulged. Then the puke was all over. Kenny had had a big breakfast that morning. Now it was all over him, the floor, and Coach Lupo’s desk.

  “For chrissakes, Lubowsky, go clean yourself up.”

  Coach Lupo waited until Lubowsky was out of his sight. Then he let his mind drift back to a summer night almost a half-century earlier – a night when he had convinced Oscar to go out onto the lake with him. Their canoe had been swamped by something they never saw. They couldn’t get the canoe back upright, because something kept ramming it. They had started swimming to shore as fast as they could. When they were almost there, Oscar had screamed. Bill had never heard anything like that scream before. Something had bitten Oscar’s ankle – right through his Achilles to the bone. Oscar was never the same again, never scored another touchdown, never got the scholarship he surely would have gotten. Oscar had never blamed Bill for what had happened that night. He had never said a word about it.

  Bill Lupo picked up the phone on his desk. He dialed the boiler room extension.

  “Oscar, it’s me, Bill. I hate to ask you this, but some kid just puked his guts out in my office. Could you bring me up a mop and some ammonia? The joint stinks. Thanks.”

  * * * *

  Deena could hardly believe her eyes. Flipping through the pages of The Bergen Record, she spotted an ad for the house she thought had gotten away.

  It was a “For Sale By Owner” ad. The Burts’ were going to try to sell their house by themselves. Deena called the number and said she’d like to stop by.

  “It’s nice,” said Deena, after Shirley Burt had led her on a little tour of the bungalow and property. “Of course it needs a bit of work.”

  Deena didn’t want to sound too enthusiastic. Though the Burts’ had already reduced their price dramatically, Deena thought she might be able to get them down even lower. While showing Deena around, Shirley had let it slip that she and her husband had already closed on a townhouse in a retirement community in North Carolina. They’d need the money from this house to help pay for that one.

  “As I said, I really like it,” said Deena. “But I’ll need a little time to think it over.”

  It was a bit of a ploy, but Deena thought maybe they’d knock another thousand or two off the price just to keep her from walking out the door.

  “Of course, dear,” said Shirley, not wanting to pressure the younger woman. “Just give us a call when you’ve made up your mind.”

  That had been on Sunday. The Burts’ thought that they might hear back later that day – or the next day at the latest. Now it was Thursday and still there’d been no word from Dr. Goode.

  Frank Burt had gone into town. Now he was walking through the front door with a copy of The Turtleback Gazette in his hand.

  “Look at this honey,” he said, holding open the newspaper for his wife to see.

  Shirley looked at the front page. She didn’t have her glasses on but she didn’t need them. The headline was huge.

  TURTLE TERROR!

  Major newspapers throughout New Jersey picked up the article, written by Marc Bozian. It showed up in The Star Ledger, The Bergen Record, even The Asbury Park Press. The story’s appearance on the front page of the metro section of The New York Times was the biggest feather yet in the young journalist’s career.

  THIRD AND WORST TURTLE ATTACK

  SHOCKS RESIDENTS OF LAKE COMMUNITY!

  Marc Bozian’s article more than satisfied readers’ appetites for grisly details. It also saw the attack as part of a disturbing, escalating trend: first a toe, then a limb, now a quadruple amputation resulting in the death of the first victim’s father.

  Bozian quoted Connie Konsulis, the woman who had first spotted the body floating in the lake.

  “From the deck of my house,” said Ms. Konsulis, age 36, “it kind of looked like a suitcase or a piece of luggage that had washed ashore.”

  Connie was such a pretty witness that the paper decided to include a picture of her out on her deck in her pink running shorts. The paper also included the photograph of JJ’s scars paired with the claw marks on the canoe. The article left very little doubt that the attacks were by the same giant snapper.

  Chief Rudolph, however, was not entirely convinced. “Maybe the last two attacks,” he was quoted as saying, “but I’m not sure about the little girl’s toe. In comparison to the others, a toe is nothing – a regular ordinary snapper could’ve done it.”

  Before his wife could even get through the first paragraph, Frank Burt blurted out, “This is the last thing we needed. Let’s call that woman and try to light a fire under her.”

  Deena had given the Burts’ her number both at home and at school. Shirley looked at the clock on the wall and then dialed the school extension.

  “Sorry to bother you at work,” said Shirley. “But we were wondering what you were thinking about the house. Maybe it would help if you stopped by for a second look.”

  “Sure,” said Deena. “I’ll come by after school today. Is four-thirtyish alright?”

  Deena showed up at quarter to five. Shirley and Frank gave her the tour together this time. When they were done, Shirley invited Deena to sit down for the tea and biscuits she had set out hoping to soften Deena up.

  “Look,” said Deena. “I love your little house. But I have to be honest. I’m not sure if now is a good time to be buying a house here. Did you see today’s paper?”

  The Burts’ exchanged a glance. Their hopes fell.

  “It might just make better sense,” said Deena, “for me to wait a little. There are a number of houses on the market now and prices could come down even lower. I might find a better deal elsewhere.”

  Frank cut Deena off.

  “What if we took another twenty-thousand off the price?”

  Shirley Burt gasped. She and her husband had not discussed a further price cut.

  “I don’t know, Frank,” said Shirley. “At that price, we’d barely be breaking even.”

  Frank ignored his wife. He kept his eyes on Deena.

  “It’s a limited-time-only offer,” he said.

  “When does it end?” asked Deena.

  “Soon.”

  “How soon?” asked Deena

  “The moment you step through that doorway,” said Frank.

  Deena looked from Frank to the door to Shirley.

  “All right,” she said. “You’ve got a deal. I’ll take it.”

  Deena put out her hand. Frank shook it. Shirley didn’t say anything. She was too shocked to speak.

  * * * *

  When August arrived at the morgue, what was left of Jack Sully was strapped on a slab so it wouldn’t roll off.

  “So what do you think, August?” said the Chief. “You’re the town’s resident scientific expert – at least for as long as you’re in town.”

  Chief Rudolph said “in town” as if he thought August was perfectly capable of leaving Turtleback Lake before he even finished his sentence.

  But August didn’t take the bait. He just said what he thought.

  “Well, I think it’s pretty obvious that this was done by the same snapper that got Ian Copeland and my grandfather,” said August. “Unless…”

  “Unless what?” asked Chief Rudolph.

  “Unless there’s more than one,” said August. “Or this snapper is a des
cendant of the one who attacked my grandfather. We can’t be a hundred percent certain.”

  “Well, that’s encouraging,” said Chief Rudolph. “Let’s just hope there’s only one – whether it’s the same one that got your granddaddy or a newer model.”

  Both men were silent for a moment. August looked at the stumps that protruded from the bottom of Jack Sully’s torso. They looked like hams with the bone still in. Both legs had been sheered off just inches below the hip. The gruesome gash between the stumps was mercifully covered with a cloth. August didn’t bother to lift it.

  “So, what do you think, August?” said Chief Rudolph. “Any ideas on how we go about killing this thing?”

  August tilted his head like a bird and looked at Chief Rudolph.

  “I don’t think killing it should be our goal,” said August.

  “Oh, really?” said Chief Rudolph. “What do you think our goal should be?”

  “I think our goal should be to catch it,” said August, ignoring the sarcasm that had come suddenly into Chief Rudolph’s voice.

  “Oh, c’mon, August! This thing is a killer, a man-eater. It’s murdered, maimed, and mutilated. Ever read scripture?”

  August raised his eyebrows, unsure where Chief Rudolph’s sudden religious turn was heading.

  “Some,” said August.

  “Well then you might’ve read, ‘As yea sow, so shall yea reap.’’”

  “You’re applying standards of human morality to a creature that isn’t human.”

  “That’s a crock of bull!” said Chief Rudolph. “If a pit bull attacks a person, what do we do with it? Pat it on the head and say ‘nice doggy?’ Hell, no, we put it to sleep – permanent sleep!”

  “Not even everybody agrees with that,” said August.

  Chief Rudolph felt his outrage rising. Was August some kind of goddam egghead pacifist?

  “And it’s not an apt comparison,” continued August. “Dogs become aggressive because of the people who raise them.”

 

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