by Edward Lee
“Sullivan said something weird,” he pointed out next. “I asked him if he knew what those words meant—”
“What words?” Mullins asked, replenishing his bloated jowl with chewing tobacco.
“Those weird words the Creeker kid said just before I blew him away. Sullivan didn’t know what they meant, but he did know they were Creeker words. ‘Creeker talk’ he called it.”
“Just proves Sullivan knows more about Natter’s people than he’s letting on.”
“Yeah, I know. But he said something else, too. He said that the Creekers were cannibals.”
“Wives’ tales,” Mullins suggested. “I been hearin’ shit like that since I was a kid. It’s stuff our daddies dreamed up to keep us in line. ‘You don’t shut up and go to sleep, the Creekers’ll come and get ya.’”
“Yeah, sure, local legends and all that. I remember some of those stories, too. But Sullivan said one more thing that was pretty specific. He said the Creekers have their own religion.”
Mullins expectorated into his cup. “Oh, you mean they ain’t Catholic?” he attempted to joke.
Phil gazed blankly out the window. It was getting dark now, the smudged panes filling up with twilight. Their own religion, he recited. In the black sky, stars shone like swirls of crushed gemstones.
I wonder what it is they worship.
««—»»
“Ona,” the Reverend voiced to himself.
His voice was a black chasm, incalculable, endless like the night. The Reverend wore raiments just as black. Just as incalculable…
The shadow stirred in the corner. The Reverend could feel the miraculous heat, could smell the exalted stench.
Oh, how long we’ve waited, his thoughts wept in joy.
Ages.
No, a hundred ages.
He thought of things then, beautiful things. He thought of the recompense of all the truth of history. Of a time when the slaves would be freed of their fetters, when they would be praised instead of reviled, glorified instead of cursed. He thought of a time when he too would walk with his brethren through the holiest dark channelworks, amid the savory smoke of burning human fat and steaming blood, to gladly pay homage, and to eat, a time when he too, and all of them, would pull the flesh off the bones of the faithless, sink deft fingers into their wide open eyes, and strip their skulls of their pitiable faces. Their screams would ring out like the sweetest madrigals. They would inhale their blood and scarf their unchaste flesh forever and ever.
Yes, the Reverend thought of the most wondrous things.
Ona…
The Reverend bowed, then fell to his knees, his arms red with blood to the elbows.
Soon, your time will be upon us.
And from the stygian dark, his god looked back at him and smiled.
— | — | —
Twenty-Seven
“Hi,” Phil said.
The station door slammed. Susan trudged in, a knapsack full of her school books tugging at her arm.
“Need some help with those books?”
“No.” She dropped the sack at the foot of her desk, then sat down at her commo console and prepared for work.
“How was school tonight?”
Susan frowned at him. She wasn’t biting on the cursory small talk, but then Phil never really guessed that she would.
“What are you doing here?” she asked.
“Talking to the chief.” He shuffled his feet, looking down. He felt like a little kid sent to the principal’s office. “Then I thought I’d hang around awhile, wait till you got in.”
“Why?” Susan sniped, checking the hot sheet and county blotter.
“Well, I think we should talk.”
“About what?”
Phil looked down at the floor. This was a lost cause before it started. Christ—women are so unforgiving. He didn’t know what to say then. But at the same moment a notion struck him very keenly. Forgiven? Wait a minute, Phil—don’t be a schmuck. What do you have to be forgiven for here? You didn’t do anything WRONG!
So against his better judgment, he mustered an unfounded gall:
“I didn’t do anything wrong!” he yelled.
Her expression seemed to recoil.
“Go ahead, make a face!” he yelled again. “Give me the cold shoulder! Treat me like dogshit! Do whatever you want, honey, but tell me this. What did I do wrong?”
“You didn’t do anything wrong,” Susan calmly replied, paging through her code book. “It’s a free country. You can do anything you want. You don’t have any obligations to me just because we went to bed. That certainly doesn’t mean we’re involved.”
“Well, pardon me if I’m just stupid, but I kind of thought that we were involved.”
“You thought we were involved?” She gaped at him. “Well, then I guess we both have drastically different definitions of the word.”
“What’s that supposed to mean?”
She gaped at him again. Phil didn’t like it when she gaped.
“Doesn’t involvement imply some kind of monogamy?” she asked.
“I didn’t cheat on you!”
“Oh, I see. I hear a scream coming from your room,” she went on, “so I come down to see if you’re all right, and what do I find? I find monogamous Phil, with a bath towel around his waist, leaning over a prostitute.”
“I didn’t sleep with her!” Phil yelled.
“Oh, then what did you do? Tell me, Phil. What do guys with towels around their waists do with prostitutes? Play chess? Read the Sunday Post? Discuss the vagaries of quasi-existential dynamics?”
“I didn’t have sex with her,” Phil nearly growled.
“Oh, okay. You didn’t have sex with her. But you can have sex with whoever you want, Phil. That’s not my point.”
Phil felt like a pressure cooker about to blow its seam. “What is your point?” he asked as calmly as he could.
“My point is you lied to me.”
Silence.
“How did I lie to you?”
If looks could kill, Phil would be dead now, a dozen times over. Her eyes leveled on him. “Before you and I did anything, I asked you, didn’t I? I asked you if you were still involved with Vicki. And you said no.”
“And that was the truth!” he yelled.
“So what was she doing in your room with you standing there with a towel wrapped around your waist.”
“She had a problem,” he said. “She got beat up, and she needed a place to sleep.”
“So you thought your bed would suffice?”
“She slept on my couch! I didn’t touch her! And I just got done telling you—I didn’t have sex with her!”
More silence, but it was not a contemplative kind of silence; it was a mocking one. “So you’re telling me,” Susan asked, “that, since you’ve been back to town, you haven’t slept with her?”
“I—” Phil began. If there was one thing he could never do, it was lie to her. If he lied, he was as phony as the phoniest guy on earth.
“Well,” he admitted, “I did once. But not today. It was last week—before you and I even went out.”
She seemed to sit in a dull shadow generated by her own anger and disappointment. It made her bright-blond hair less bright, her blue eyes like ruddy stones. Her voice sounded just as ruddy when she said, “I’d have to be out of my mind to believe a load of crap like that.”
“Susan, you’ve got this all wrong—”
She mockingly glanced at her watch, then looked up at him again. “Oh, you’re still here?”
Phil turned and went out the back through Mullins’ office. Why flog a dead horse? She’ll never trust me in a million years, he realized. I fucked it all up—good job, Phil. I wonder what else you can fuck up today. He could scorn himself forever, but that would not change the fact that there was nothing else he could do.
clank!
Out by the back driveway, Phil looked to his left. The door stood open to the old lockup, which Mullins had converted to a supp
ly room. He must be in there now, Phil deduced, noticing both the patrol cruiser and Mullins’ own sedan still in the lot. Probably getting more coffee and Red Man. Phil strode on toward his car. It was back to Sallee’s, to start all over again now. The low moon shone pasty yellow, just rising over the top of the station. Cricket sounds throbbed steadily.
Phil turned again, much more abruptly this time, at yet another sound coming from the old lockup.
The sound of breaking glass.
It was probably nothing—The chief probably dropped a coffee pot—but Phil thought it best to investigate anyway. What if it wasn’t Mullins? What if someone was actually breaking in? Yeah, the rednecks around here are even stupid enough to bust into a police supply room, Phil considered.
The building stood merely as a drab cinder block edifice about the size of a typical trailer. Phil entered cautiously. A single low-watt bulb lit the dusty hallway. Another door stood open at the end. Phil decided not to call out; in the event that someone was burgling the place, the element of surprise would work greatly to his favor.
He walked very quietly to the next door, peeked in, and—
What the hell is this?
—noticed at once that this was no supply room. It was what it always had been. A jail.
Three barred cells lined the wall. The first two were empty. Mullins bent over before the third, picking pieces of glass off the floor.
“Ya fuckin’A-hole dimwit. Ya busted a perfectly good glass,” Mullins griped.
But who was he griping to?
“Hey, Chief?” Phil spoke up. “What gives?”
Mullins glared up, his fat, round face inflamed. “What the hell are you doing here!” he shouted.
Then Phil saw why his chief was acting so guilty. In the third cell, which Mullins claimed had been empty for years, sat an unshaven, overweight young man.
A prisoner, Phil realized. Mullins had a prisoner in here all this time and never told me…
««—»»
“For shit sake! I was gonna tell ya!” Mullins insisted.
“Yeah, right, just like you were gonna tell me about how for the last six months you’ve been finding mutilated bodies all over goddamn town!” Phil was so mad he was shaking. “Yeah, you were gonna tell me, Chief, only you didn’t! Christ, you never would’ve told me if I hadn’t found out on my own!”
“Phil, you’re jumpin’ the gun here. Let me ex—”
“Goddamn, Chief! Everything you tell me is a crock of shit! And now this—” Phil extended a hand to the third jail cell. “You tell me you haven’t used the lockup for anything but a supply room, and now I walk in and see you’ve had a prisoner in here all along! What the hell’s going on?”
“Well, if you’d shut up and quit yelling a minute and let me fuckin’ talk—”
Once again, Phil couldn’t help but feel totally betrayed by his boss; this was the third or fourth time Mullins had oddly withheld information from him. Red-faced, then, he jerked his gaze into the cell. “And who the hell is this guy anyway?”
“His name’s Gut Clydes,” Mullins said. “Just another local punk selling dust and raising hell. Came in here one night all wired up and crazy, saying he’d been attacked by Creekers.”
“Creekers?” Phil asked, as astonished as he was outraged. “This fucking guy was attacked by Creekers, and you wouldn’t let me question him?”
“He said he was attacked by Creekers,” Mullins corrected. “Don’t believe a word of it—he was hallucinatin’, the fucker could barely walk, he was so high on dust.”
“No, I weren’t!” exclaimed the guy in the cell. “And it’s true, it was Creekers that jacked us up that night. And it was Creekers who killed my buddy.”
“Shut up, ya A-hole,” Mullins replied, “before I kick ya straight into the county can. Probably what I shoulda done in the first place.”
“What did you charge him with?” Phil asked.
“Nothing. I’m just lettin’ him dry out for a while.”
Phil rolled his eyes big-time. “Chief, you can’t just keep a guy in jail without charging him and filing with the DA for an arraignment.”
“Shore I can; this is a personal matter. I’m not charging the kid on account of his daddy’s a friend of mine. Figure I’ll let him dry out in there a while, and hopefully the fat punk’ll learn his lesson. Besides, he don’t want to leave—don’t believe me, go ahead and ask him. And I didn’t bother tellin’ ya about him ’cos I wanted to wait till he’d gotten his head straightened out before I let you question him. Shit, for a week he wasn’t talkin’ nothin’ except the craziest load of malarkey you ever heard, and he ain’t much better now.”
None of this sounded right, but it was beginning to occur to Phil that nothing Mullins said ever sounded right. True, chronic PCP users frequently required several days or even weeks to detoxify enough to regain their mental coherence, and it was also true that they frequently hallucinated. But at this precise moment that didn’t matter much.
“You think I’m bullshitting you, don’t ya?” Mullins challenged, his steely eyes leveling.
“Yeah,” Phil said. “I think I do.”
“Why would I do that?”
“I don’t know. I don’t know what to think any more.”
“All right,” Mullins grumbled. “The fucker’s crazier than a possum in a shithole, but don’t take my word for it. What do I know, I’ve only been the fuckin’ chief around here for thirty fuckin’ years. Go ahead and question him, then you can tell me about all the great reliable information you got out of the guy. Go ahead, go ahead, waste all your time—see if I care.” And with that final objection, Mullins huffed out.
Phil turned on another light and peered into the cell, to get a closer look at its occupant. The kid sat dejected on his cot next to a metal sink and toilet. Jeans, sneakers, baggy T-shirt, and a belly on him that rivaled Mullins’. Long, stringy brown hair dangled at his shoulders, and he obviously wasn’t given to shaving with any regularity. Just another fat, going-nowhere redneck, Phil suspected. But his name, Gut, rang a quick bell—one of Sullivan’s point runners, one of his “replacements.”
“So, Gut, what’s your story? How long you been in there?”
“‘Bout a month, I guess. It ain’t bad. Chief Mullins, he brings me in food three times a day, decent stuff from like the Qwik-Stop and Burger King, and takes me ta the shower ever so often.”
Qwik-Stop and Burger King, Phil mused. All the daily nutritional requirements for a growing boy. “Is it true you don’t want to leave here?”
“Well, yeah, it’s true.”
“Why’s that? Why’s a kid your age want to sit in jail?”
Gut ran a hand over his face, looking down between his feet. “I figure if I stays in here long enough, they’ll ferget about me.”
“Who’s they, Gut? The Creekers?”
“Yeah.” The kid gulped at the sound of the word. “The Creekers.”
Phil sat down on an opposite bench. Typical. Drug-induced paranoia. A common trait among chronic PCP-users. “And what’s this you say about them killing a buddy of yours? Would that be Scott-Boy?”
Gut looked up from between his knees. “Howdja know that?”
“I know a lot of things, Gut,” Phil said. “I know you’ve been driving drop-off points for some new dust lab backed by some money guy from Florida. I know you guys have been trying to take the local dust market from the regular supplier. And I know you’ve been working with Eagle Peters, Paul Sullivan, Jake Rhodes, and Blackjack.”
“Shit, man. Who’s been walking all over me?”
“Don’t worry about it. All those guys? They’re all either dead or disappeared. Your competition has been hitting them all, and they’ve been doing a damn good job. You should’ve seen Peters and Rhodes. Sullivan ever tell you why he took you and Scott-Boy on to drive points?”
“Naw. Why?”
“Because everybody they had doing the job beforehand disappeared. And there’s one more thing
I know, Gut. I know that it’s Natter and his Creekers who’re making the hits. He’s been using Sallee’s as a distro point. I want you to tell me where his lab is.”
Gut looked suddenly perplexed, or just stupid. “Natter? I don’t know nothin’ ’bout Natter. Paul never told me exactly who we were selling against.”
Jesus, not this shit again, Phil thought. “Come on, Gut, don’t bullshit me. It’s nice and safe in there, but I don’t think you’d like the county slam. You ever heard the term ‘boy-pussy, cell-block bitch’?”
“I swear, man. I don’t know nothin’ ’bout Natter dealing in flake. All I knows is it was him who had the Creekers do the job on Scott-Boy.”
“You saw Natter kill your buddy?”
“He was there. I knows it was him ’cos I seed him with my own eyes. At first I weren’t sure on account of I was so shit-scared. But once I got out of there and turned myself in to Chief Mullins, I realized who it was. It was Cody Natter.”
Phil took a time out, to control his excitement. This was too easy. Five minutes ago I didn’t have a case, and now I got an eyewitness who can testify that he saw Natter perpetrate a drug-related murder. Guess I got up on the right side of the bed today.
“But it weren’t fer running flake that the Creekers jacked us up,” Gut continued, staring out from the darkness in his cell. “It was Scott-Boy, see? We picked up this chick hitchin’ that night—Scott-Boy had a mind to give her a goin’ over, ya know, we was out rucking. But it turns out this chick’s a Creeker. So’s Scott-Boy’s got her in the truck gettin’ ready ta do her, and all’s a sudden there’s Creekers all over the place, and they’se haul him out and slit him open right there in the dirt. It was, like, fer sackerfice or somethin’.”
Phil’s face drooped as he looked back through the cell bars. What the hell is he talking about? “Gut, you’re telling me the Creekers killed Scott-Boy as part of a sacrifice?”
“Yeah,” Gut replied with no reluctance—and, it seemed, with no lack of belief. “Cody Natter, he’s pure evil, see?”
“Pure evil?”
“That’s right, the evilest man I ever seed. Them Creekers, they worship themselves a demon, and it’s to this demon they sackerfice folks.”