Wormfood, page 5
Fat Ernst poured two shots of Wild Turkey. “Well, I can almost understand him being upset. Earl wasn’t exactly in the best shape after going for a swim in the ditch and all.” He slid one of the shot glasses across the bar to Ray.
“Hell, you don’t know the half of it.” Ray downed the shot, straightened up, and said, “I got the real story from a buddy a mine; he’s in the Coast Guard.” Ray nodded importantly. “Earl and these two other rich old boys, buddies of his in the CCA, rented a fourteen-footer out of Noyo Harbor.”
The CCA was the California Cattleman’s Association, referred to by most of the customers of Fat Ernst’s bar as “those pricks from downstate,” because the CCA was an exclusive club, reserved for the twenty-five richest ranchers in the state.
“That’s some heavy inside dope you got there, Ray,” Fat Ernst said, sarcasm falling to the bar between them in fat, quivering drops. “Hell, I already seen that on the news.” He hooked the naked dentures over Heck’s shot glass.
“Yeah, well, like I said, you don’t know the half of it,” Ray saidquickly, smoothing out his pathetically thin mustache with his thumb and forefinger as if to reassure himself. I stopped moving the mop around for a moment and listened.
“These guys are fishing for steelhead, right at the mouth of the Klamath River. Maybe twenty, thirty yards out. You’ve been fishin’ there, right?”
Fat Ernst nodded vaguely. Ray spit his words out in an excited rush. “They’re right at the mouth out there, where the waves are surging around in every fucking direction, and the water’s so churned up you can’t see jack shit.”
“Yeah, I been there,” Fat Ernst said.
“‘Course, it’s too damn early for steelhead fishing, season don’t open for another two months at least. But these boys”—Ray lowered his thin, reedy voice in a conspiratorial tone—“now, these boys are doing some serious drinking. Shit, Coast Guard found four empty bottles of tequila, and that’s not counting the beer cans that washed away.”
Fat Ernst yawned. Personally, I didn’t give a damn one way or the other how Earl had died. Like I said, part of me was glad he was dead. I was about to hurry up and finish slathering dirty water on the floor and go home when Deputy Ray spoke up.
“So they’re out there, okay, fishing and doing some serious drinking. And then one of ’em hooks a shark.”
I let the mop drift around in small circles, almost by itself, and turned to the bar. Fat Ernst had actually turned away from the television set up in the corner and was now facing Ray, who was perched on the bar stool, leaning into the wood as if someone had propped a fence post up against the bar. There’s something about sharks that grabs folks’ attention.
“I guess it was just a blue shark, nothin’ special, maybe eight, nine feet long. Sounded like the fella had a salmon on first, and the shark must’ve gone after that fish, just swallowed it whole, salmon, hook, and everything. Pure dumb luck it got hooked. Now, if it was any other line, a shark that size would’ve—”
“It woulda snapped,” Fat Ernst broke in. When it came to catching and killing things, Fat Ernst considered himself an expert.
“Exactly. But these guys …” Deputy Ray pointed at Fat Ernst with his shot glass for emphasis. “These guys were using eighty-pound test, something like that. So they manage to haul it up to the surface, all fired up about taking those teeth. But the thing ain’t dead, and it’s thrashing around, right off the stern, and these dumb bastards don’t know what the hell to do about it.”
Fat Ernst filled the shot glass and said, “You put a bullet in its head, that’s what you do.” He gave a slow chuckle filled with phlegm, experienced beyond his years as a rough-and-tumble shark killer.
“Exactly,” Deputy Ray repeated. “So while the fella that had hooked the thing, he’s hanging on to that fishing pole, screaming about how he’s gonna put them jaws above the fireplace, Earl is digging around for that old Army Colt .45. Meanwhile, his other buddy found a two-by-four somewhere, and he’s trying to bash the shark’s head in, but he’s just pissing it off. So, I guess Earl stumbled to the back of the boat, and here’s where the accounts start to differ. One fella said that the boat lurched sideways all of a sudden, from a wave, I guess, and the other fella, the one with the fishing pole, said the shark tried to attack the boat or some damn thing. Doesn’t matter much, though.”
Unable to help himself, Deputy Ray grinned. “Well, that .45 went off and Earl put a bullet right through his own fucking foot.”
Fat Ernst wobbled and gave a wheezing laugh that sounded like gravel falling off a truck.
“That bullet went right through his foot and on through the bottom of the boat. But a course, they wouldn’t of known that at the time, ’cause somehow Earl fell into that eighty-pound test line, and the fella dropped the pole to help. Well, the line got all wrapped around Earl’s neck and I’ll be damned if that shark didn’t pull him right out of the fucking boat.” Deputy Ray downed his shot but started to giggle, holding his hand up to his mouth to stop Wild Turkey from dribbling out. After a moment, he got himself under control and continued.
“I guess the shark went after that bloody foot for a while, chewed it pretty much right off from what I hear, and old Earl, drunk as hell, he just sank like a rock, and that was that. His friends couldn’t help much ‘cause they were trying to stop the boat from being tossed into the rocks. And that was the last they saw of him, until the Coast Guard found him a week later, all tangled up in those Indians’ nets.” He paused. “And that ain’t all.”
Fat Ernst poured another shot.
Ray whispered, “I guess when they brought him back up to the surface, things had been chewing on him. Things had been eating him from the inside. Didn’t find no holes though. So that meant that these ocean critters, they crawled into his insides through his … his orifices, and I ain’t talking about his goddamn mouth, neither.”
And right then the front door bounced off the wall and Slim walked in, wearing his cowboy hat and a soaking wet oiled-canvas duster. He looked like someone had spit in his socks and he’d been wearing them for a few days now. He pointed at Deputy Ray. “Been looking for you. Where the hell have you been?”
“Sheriff’s got me running around all over the place. I haven’t—”
Slim shook his head, stalking across the floor, leaving another trail of mud where I had just finished mopping. “Don’t give me any of that horseshit. This is serious. I’m talking about a goddamn hit and run.” He shoved his finger into Ray’s narrow chest and pushed the deputy back against the bar.
“Now you go out there and arrest them Sawyer brothers. I don’t care how you do it, but I want them in jail by tomorrow morning, or I swear to God I will have your fucking badge.” Slim looked like he’d not only rip the badge off of Ray’s chest; he’d cheerfully eat it as well. “When I’m through with you, you won’t be able to get a job guarding a goddamn garbage can, you got that?”
Ray swallowed, and that Adam’s apple bounced up and down like a punching bag. “Yessir, sure. I’ll go talk to ‘em. Don’t you worry.”
“I don’t want you to talk to ’em. I want ’em in jail or dead.” Slim straightened and took off his plastic-covered cowboy hat. He pointed it at Ray, shaking little drops of rainwater onto the floor. “Hell, I’d prefer dead.”
Ray nodded vigorously, as if he might just decide to drive out to the Sawyer brothers’ house right now and start shooting.
Slim turned to Fat Ernst. “And if you see those punks—seems like they’re here every goddamn time I drive by—you’ll let me know, right?”
“Of course. We’re friends, aren’t we?” Fat Ernst mumbled around his half-chewed cigar, then grinned. “How about a beer?”
“Can’t tonight. I have to go pick up the new casket myself ’cause Hutson’s still in the hospital. Besides that, the whole goddamn back fifty acres is underwater, and on top of everything else, I got two dead steers I got to take care of.”
Slim pulled a well-used handkerchief out of his back pocket and blew his nose forcefully, his entire body shaking with effort. I figured that snot must have been buried deep, like in his intestines. After briefly and automatically checking the contents, he stowed the piece of cloth safely back into his pocket. Then he jammed his cowboy hat back on and pointed at Ray again. “I ain’t kidding about those goddamn Sawyers. They best be in jail tomorrow or, so help me God, you’ll live to regret it.”
Ray nodded again. “Yessir. You got it.”
As Slim took a step toward the door, Fat Ernst lurched to his feet and raised his hand. “Hang on, hang on. Before you go rushing off, I got a … a business proposition for you.” Fat Ernst broke off and looked at his hand, like he wasn’t sure how it got there and now he didn’t know what to do with it. He casually let it drift down to scratch his belly, pretending to ignore it.
Slim merely crossed his arms and waited, rain dripping from his cowboy hat.
“See, I’ve got a little supply problem …” Fat Ernst eased aroundthe bar and approached Slim. His voice dropped to a murmur. “I’m almost out of meat here.”
Slim began to answer, but Fat Ernst kept going, saying, “It’s those goddamn bastards over at Costco. They got the orders screwed up again. Of course, I already paid ‘em.”
I knew for a fact that Costco refused to sell Fat Ernst anything until he paid off what he already owed them.
Slim said, “So?”
“Well, I was thinking we could maybe, you know, cut some sort of a deal. Something a little better than what Harris is paying.”
Slim shook his head and cleaned out the inside of his nose with his thumb. “Sorry. Ninety-five cents a pound. Same as always.”
“Okay, okay. But I’m thinking I could maybe, you know, pay you back a little later …” He grinned widely at Slim. Slim grinned right back. Both of them stood there, grinning away and showing lots of teeth. I felt like somebody ought to take a picture.
“I’m afraid I can’t do it. I got expenses,” Slim said finally.
The grin never left Fat Ernst’s face, but I could hear air faintly hissing out from between his clenched teeth. “Aw, hell, that’s okay. I understand. We all got expenses.” He stuck out a beefy hand. “Maybe next time we can do some business.”
Slim took the hand and shook it twice, and that should have been that, but I got a bad feeling it was just getting started.
CHAPTER 8
Around ten, Junior kicked the front door hard enough that the needle tracing its way over “Ghost Riders In the Sky” jumped and played the chorus twice. He stood in the doorway, grinning fiercely, and shouted, “Freeze, cocksuckers. This is a stickup.”
Nobody moved except me. I had been wiping down the tables, trying hard to look busy. Actually, I was just killing time. When the door slammed into the wall and Junior appeared there like some sadistic jack-in-the-box, I put the pool table between me and Junior.
I know it wasn’t the cool thing to do, to run like a frightened rabbit, but I couldn’t help myself. I never knew what to think when it came to the Sawyer brothers. Hell, I wouldn’t put it past them to try and hold up Fat Ernst. But Junior just laughed and grabbed a stool at the bar. His pompadour looked solid, as if he’d used about a gallon of hairspray along with some motor oil and industrial glue. I tried to act casual and started wiping down the nearest table.
Fat Ernst finally tore his gaze away from a fishing show on the television and shouted, “Close the door! You born in a barn?”
“Nope. I was born in the kitchen. Bert was the one born in the barn.”
As if summoned by the mention of his name, Bert staggered through the front door. His entire right arm was encased in a crude plaster cast. He was grinning too, but his eyes rolled loosely around in their sockets as if they weren’t attached to anything. He raised his left arm in greeting and lost his balance in the process, nearly falling onto the pool table.
“What the hell happened to you?” Fat Ernst asked.
“Broke my arm!” Bert said proudly, brandishing his cast.
“No shit? Figured it was your leg.”
“Aw, don’t mind him,” Junior said, making himself at home at the bar. “He was bitchin’ and moanin’ all day, so we swung by the vet’s, and he set that sucker real good and gave Bert some horse tranquilizers.” He looked over at Bert, still leaning against the pool table. “He’s as right as rain now. Ain’t that right, Bert?”
“You goddamn got that right,” Bert said in a matter-of-fact tone. He managed to stagger toward the bar and drop onto a stool.
“You fellas fucked up my deal with Slim today,” Fat Ernst said tiredly. “He was too damn pissed for business.”
“Slim’s always pissed about something.”
Ray pulled himself to his feet and stuck his chest out. “Been meaning to talk to you boys about this morning.”
“Shut your hole, Ray,” Fat Ernst snapped. “Better yet, get the fuck out. We’re closed. You too, Heck. Out.”
Ray turned to the bar. “Hell, Ernst, it ain’t even eleven yet. I got another three hours left on duty. And I’m supposed to interrogate these boys.”
“Don’t make me ask you twice.”
Ray put on his hat and stood up. He tossed down another shot of Wild Turkey and readjusted his belt and cowboy hat. “Fine. Fine. I’ll talk to you fellas later. Don’t make me come looking for you.”
“Shit, Ray, this morning, that wasn’t our fault. Slim knows it. Talk to dipshit here,” he said, and pointed at me. “And if Slim’s still pissed off, you tell him he can kiss my sweet hairy ass.”
Ray started to say something else, but Fat Ernst barked, “Pay up and get out. Now. And take Heck with you. Looks like he’s passed out again.”
“C’mon Heck. Let’s go home,” Ray grumbled. “Don’t see why I always have to be the babysitter.”
Heck whimpered something about his wife as Deputy Ray half carried, half dragged the old man toward the open door. Fat Ernst shouted after them, “And close that fucking door. Every goddamn mosquito in the county is just waltzing right in.”
“You want us out too?” Junior asked.
Fat Ernst rubbed his eyes with his fists, making him look oddly childlike. A fat three-year-old with a crew cut. “Not yet. I got a little job for you.” He sighed. “But since the rocket scientist here went and broke his arm, it looks like you’re gonna need a little help.”
Fat Ernst turned and stared at me. “Considering how you stepped into that pile of shit this morning, you just volunteered to help these fellas out. They’re gonna run a little errand for me, and you’re gonna go along for the ride. Maybe I’ll even throw in a little extra cash. Fair enough?”
“Well … depends,” I said, surprising myself.
Fat Ernst’s thick features scrunched up together as if the fat rolls were trying to touch each other in the middle of his face. He turned to Bert and Junior and said, “You fellas sit tight. Got me a little attitude adjustment to make on an employee. Be right back.”
He waddled down the length of the bar with surprising speed and grace, then grabbed me just above my elbow and nearly pulled me off my feet, shoving me through the swinging doors. I stumbled against the stove, sharp fear sparking and flaring in the pit of my stomach.
His thick, stubby thumb and fingers dug into the flesh on either side of my jaw, forcing my head up until I was looking directly into his big face. For a long, uncomfortable moment, he just stared at me and I realized that this was the first time I had ever met Fat Ernst’s eyes. They were sunk deep into his pockmarked cheeks like two olives in a bowl of cottage cheese that had been left out too long.
Fat Ernst swiveled his blunt head to the side and spat on the stove, then turned up the heat with his free hand. “Seems to me, boy, we got ourselves a little problem here. You been forgetting your place in the food chain.” The spit started to sizzle and dance on the griddle.
My eyes never left the boiling spit. Thick grease began to pop on the black iron.
“I still own that shithole trailer and the land. So unless you and that old bitch want to find a new place to live, you best straighten up and fly right.” He grabbed my left wrist and jerked my hand out over the griddle.
“When I say jump, you jump,” he whispered into my right ear. “No questions. No back talk. No nothing. You got that?”
He forced my hand closer to the black iron. The heat started to sear my palm, just five inches over the stove. Liquid pain curled around my hand and raced up my arm. I sucked in a ragged breath.
“You hearing me, you little shit?” Fat Ernst hissed into my ear.
I tried to nod.
“So you’re gonna help the fellas out tonight, that’s all there is to it. You understand what I’m saying here?”
I kept nodding, unable to look away from what was left of the sizzling spit.
And suddenly, as quickly as he had grabbed me, he released my wrist and neck at the same time. I cringed back against the sink.
Fat Ernst took out a fresh cigar, bit the end off, and swallowed it. He shifted his center of gravity, rolling back on his heels. “Hell, son, I’m just trying to look out for your best interests. I know that you don’t have a father around anymore to teach you things. I’m just trying to help you here. Life ain’t a bunch of goddamn roses. You gotta work for things, get in there, spread a little manure around. Life don’t just step up and spread her legs for you. You understand what I’m saying?”
“I … I think so.” I didn’t have a goddamn clue what the hell he was talking about.
“You’re too damn soft, boy. Too much of a pansy. Life is gonna kick your ass and stomp you into the dirt unless you get yourself a little backbone.”
I nodded and let my gaze fall to the floor.
“You look at me when I’m talking.” I jerked my head back up and stared at his face. But I couldn’t look into his eyes. I focused on his squat nose instead.



