Authors: Patricia Cornwell
“A trout?” he asked Moses as Trader frantically tried to lift the suitcase again and groaned in exertion.
“Sure is,” Moses said. “A nice one, too.”
Becoming more desperate and a little wary of the two ragged fishermen, Trader tried to drag the suitcase and began cursing. Moses held up the flapping trout, and Andy noticed an old hook wound in its lower lip. The trout looked at Trader and played dead.
“Let it go,” Andy said to Moses. “We don’t need a fish or crabs or anything else to ID this big fat piece of lying shit.”
He pulled off his fake beard and ponytail wig and whipped out his pistol.
“Hands up in the air, Trader,” Andy fiercely ordered as Moses worked the hook out of the trout’s mouth and tossed him back into the river.
“Free at last,” Moses said to the trout as it swam away.
“You’re under arrest!” Andy shouted.
R
EGINA
was giving orders and shouting as well, and not having a good result. Trip the minihorse had been delivered to the mansion an hour earlier, and Regina had paid little attention to the trainer’s instructions and had not bothered to watch the training videotape. How hard could it be to tell a tiny
horse to turn right, left, sit, come, or lie down? But she had been barking commands at the guide animal nonstop and Trip just stood in the middle of the ballroom and stared at her.
“Move,” Regina said, snapping her fingers and stamping her foot.
Trip blinked and didn’t budge.
“Come here right this minute,” Regina tried again in a harsh tone as the First Lady hurried down the winding staircase, clutching a box of trivets that she intended to stash in the butler’s pantry.
“You stupid pony!” Regina yelled.
“Regina!” Mrs. Crimm paused, panting hard from exertion. “You know not to talk to the help that way!”
“Oh, she isn’t talking to me, ma’am,” Pony said as he appeared in his starchy white coat. “Can I assist you with that box?”
“What’s all the commotion about?” the governor inquired as he stepped out of a parlor, peering through his magnifying glass, obviously befuddled. “Where am I? I walked into my office and I couldn’t find my desk. Did someone move my desk? What are you carrying, Maude?”
“Just some things that need to be tossed,” she quickly made up a story. “I was cleaning out one of my closets and came across that revolving shoe tree I bought on an information commercial. I don’t suppose you know which one I mean, but it’s never served a useful purpose, and most of the shoes on it are out of style anyway.”
“Your desk is in the same spot,” Pony told the governor. “May I help you upstairs, sir?”
“What’s this?” The governor spied the minihorse and was instantly smitten. “What a pretty little fellow you are! And such a handsome harness with a nice little leather handle, and my goodness, he even has shoes!”
“He has to have shoes or he’ll slide all over the hardwood floor,” Regina impatiently explained as the First Lady dashed downstairs to hide the trivets. “But he’s worthless. He won’t do a thing I say, so I certainly can’t see what good he’s going to do, Papa. Come here!” Regina clapped her hands at the indifferent tiny horse. “You idiot, get here right this minute or I’m sending you back and you can just go live with some
other blind person who probably lives in a dump and has no household staff or limousines or cooks or important people visiting!”
“Perhaps you’re not saying the right words to him,” the governor considered as he moved closer to Trip and patted his thick red mane. “Sit,” he said.
Trip did nothing.
“Fetch.” The governor tossed an imaginary stick across the Oriental rug. “Well, leave it then.”
Trip did.
“Sir,” Pony said. “What would you like for your midafternoon snack?”
“I believe two eggs and a piece of toast would be nice,” the governor replied as his magnified cloudy eye scanned his new guide horse.
“Over or under?” Pony politely asked.
“Under,” the governor decided, and Trip suddenly crawled under an inlaid mahogany Federal card table.
“Now isn’t that strange,” the governor commented as he got down on his knees and tried to coax Trip back out. “I think there’s something wrong with this horse. Or maybe you’ve confused the poor thing and intimidated him with your rude voice,” he said to Regina.
“Right,” she said sarcastically, and Trip backed out from under the table, turned right, and started walking across the ballroom in his Velcro-fastened tennis shoes. “Everything’s always my fault. I’m so sick and tired of being blamed for whatever goes wrong. I’m an excellent supervisor, and it’s the retarded horse who’s screwing up, not me . . . !”
“Wait,” the governor snapped at his daughter, because he had heard quite enough.
Trip stopped.
“Sir?” Pony was back. “Would you like hollandaise sauce, butter, salt, pepper, or anything else on your eggs?”
Crimm paused to check on his submarine, which had been blissfully still in the water since he had stopped eating Major Trader’s sweets. Well, maybe he didn’t need such a bland diet anymore. Dear Lord, wouldn’t that be a blessing?
“I might even try ham again,” he thought out loud.
“I can put ham on the eggs, as well,” Pony suggested as
Trip continued to walk across the ballroom, his driverless harness flopping.
“Well, why not?” the governor happily said. “Load up!”
Trip stopped in his tracks and then headed toward the elevator.
“Look at that,” Pony marveled. “That horse is headed right toward the . . . where’s he going? He’s going to the . . .”
“Lift!” the governor interrupted with excitement, finishing Pony’s sentence and using the English word for elevator, because he preferred all things English and always had.
Trip stopped and lifted a hoof.
“I believe there’s a pattern developing,” the governor announced as he went to Trip and patted his head. “You can put your foot down, little fellow.”
Trip didn’t move.
“Seems like to me he only listens to one or two words,” Pony observed. “Load up,” he said to Trip.
The horse lowered his hoof and headed to the elevator again. Intrigued and challenged, Pony followed and pushed the down button. The doors opened and Trip boarded.
“We’ll just ride along with him and see what he does,” the governor said, enjoying himself more than he had in quite a long time.
He and Pony rode the elevator with Trip, and when the doors opened on the kitchen level of the mansion, the minihorse stood still, waiting.
“Let me see,” the governor pondered. “I suppose the opposite of load up would be unload. Unload,” he said to Trip.
Trip clomped off the elevator.
“Right!” Pony exclaimed, hoping that the governor had figured out the pattern of commands.
Pony turned right and walked through an open door, where the First Lady was struggling to set the heavy box of trivets on a shelf. When she heard the minihorse’s sneakers and glanced around and saw her husband, she shrieked and the box crashed to the floor. Trivets clanked and banged and scattered across centuries-old heart of pine.
“Wait!” Mrs. Crimm tried to explain as her thoughts and fears tumbled together nonsensically.
Trip stopped.
“What are all these?” the governor asked her, perplexed, as he eyed the trivets through his magnifying glass. “Okay,” he said.
Released from the wait command, Trip stood inside the pantry surrounded by trivets and listened for what he was supposed to do next.
“So that’s what this is all about!” the governor declared. “Shopping. Huh. You’ve been hiding trivets again, and all the while I thought you were entertaining immoral men in the mansion.”
“How could you think such a thing?” the First Lady cried out as she stooped to gather up her beloved trivets, or at least the most recent batch of them she had ordered over the Internet. “Why, Bedford! I would never cheat on you!”
“Leave it,” the governor ordered her to stop picking up the trivets, and Trip obeyed the command by not bothering to do anything, not that he was doing much at the moment anyway.
“What do you mean,
again
?” Mrs. Crimm asked in amazement. “You know I’ve been hiding trivets?”
She gave Pony an accusing look, and he shrugged as if to say,
He didn’t find out from me.
“Oh, I’ve run into your trivets here and there,” the governor explained. “Frankly, I just thought they were junk, possibly left by previous governors in the last century.”
“They most certainly aren’t junk,” Mrs. Crimm said indignantly. “And they’re very expensive,” she unwisely added.
“Send them back,” the governor ordered.
“Back? Back!” the First Lady raised her voice angrily and Trip took a step back inside the pantry, clanking a horseshoe trivet into a lacy one that featured a dog.
“Goodness me!” Pony was startled. “You think he recognized the horseshoe and that’s why he decided to step on it? That’s one smart little horse! Maybe he recognized the dog, too. Maybe that’s his way of saying he wants to knock Frisky out of the way and be your only pet.”
“We must keep them separated,” Mrs. Crimm said, dismayed that she had yet one more thing to worry about. “Oh,
poor Frisky. He’ll be heartbroken if we pay more attention to this little pony than to him.”
It was unfortunate that she planted this thought in her husband’s head, because from that point on, he began to refer to the minihorse as the
pony,
which was very confusing to Pony the butler.
“Come here, pony,” the governor tried to coax Trip out of the pantry, and Pony responded by stepping inside the pantry, where he, Trip, the First Lady, and the governor crowded one another and began to step on trivets. “Be good, pony, and come on out of here,” the governor said as if Trip were Frisky and might expect a biscuit.
Pony stepped back out of the pantry, and Trip didn’t budge.
“You’re being very obstinate, pony,” the governor said rather sharply.
“I’m sorry, sir,” Pony said, and by now he was thoroughly confused. “I didn’t mean to do nothing to upset you. I guess you want your eggs under. And let me see. Load up? I believe that’s what you said.”
“Right,” the governor abstractedly answered as he peered through his magnifying glass at Trip as the minihorse walked out of the pantry and under a harvest table before he headed to the elevator and took a right, which led him into the kitchen.
“That’s the most amazing horse I ever seen!” Pony marveled. “Look at that, sir. I think he’s going to fix your eggs. Now listen up,” he said to Trip. “Under. And load up. That’s how your master wants his eggs.”
Trip walked under a butcher’s block and headed back to the elevator.
“I was just having a little fun,” Pony sheepishly said to the First Couple. “I know there ain’t no horse on this planet that can cook. If there was, you could just have all these little horses in the mansion and you wouldn’t need inmates no more.”
“I, for one, wouldn’t eat anything a horse cooked,” Mrs. Crimm said with disapproval. “Think how unsanitary that would be.”
“That reminds me,” the governor said, following Trip. “We need to get you straight with the Department of Corrections. I’ll give them a call.”
“So you must’ve read that nice thing Trooper Truth said about helping me out,” Pony remarked with joy and amazement. “I sure do wish I knew who he was, ’cause I’d like to show my ’preciation.”
“Hey! Shut the fuck up!” The hostile voice came from inside a cramped, stinking, dark cell. It was late at night now, and the lights had been turned off inside the city jail.
“Shut yourself up!” Major Trader snarled back at the tedious bandit who called himself Stick and had ended up in jail after supposedly bumping his head, which had been covered with a bag, and then faking unconsciousness, assuming he would get a free ride to the hospital and then escape. It didn’t work.
“Shut up!” another inmate chimed in, and Trader wasn’t certain, but he thought the offensive voice belonged to Slim Jim, a repeat offender whose specialty was picking car locks and stealing toll money and sunglasses.
“
You
shut up!” Trader answered back. He was in far too foul a mood to be intimidated by anyone.
“No!
You
shut up, you motherfucker!” And it was Snitch who was awake now and irritable.
“Sí,”
the Mexican boy piped up. “Everybody shut up,
por favor.”
“Stay out of it, spic,” Trader warned.
“Huh!” the Mexican boy replied, offended. “I seen you jumping around the Dumpster.”
“Whoa,” Stick said. “I knew that man was crazy as shit. What he be jumping around a Dumpster for?”
“I think he was jerking off,” said the Mexican boy, who had yet to reveal his real name to his cellmates or admit to the po-lice that he was a juvenile. “See, I’m hiding from the police behind this bar, you know? And I seen him jumping around in the alley and he’s holding his dick and jumping and making all kinda noise. So I run off ’cause he’s
loco.
”
“Ain’t you lucky as shit to end up in the same cell with him,” Snitch sarcastically said as he shoved the flat pillow under the back of his head. “Ain’t all of us lucky to have some crazyass stinking fat loco in the cell with us?”
“Yeah, what you jumping around for, huh?” Stick prodded Trader.
“None of your damn business. But I have a reason for everything and do nothing without a motive.”
“Whoa. Loco-motive,” Slim Jim said in a mocking voice. “We got Locomotive on the next bed.”
“Please. Let’s not fight. It’s bad enough to be in here. For the love of God, let’s show a little consideration and pray for peace,” said Reverend Pontius Justice, who had dropped off several videotapes at Barbie Fogg’s house last night and then had made the mistake of negotiating for a blow job on his way out of her neighborhood, only to discover that the woman he had decided to solicit wasn’t a hooker but a spinster whose car had broken down and the battery had died in her cell phone.
“What would I want your twenty dollars for?” the spinster had inquired in a strange accent as Reverend Justice motioned her to come closer to his Cadillac. “If you offering me taxi money, babe, that sure is nice, but I don’t take no money from strangers.”
“I don’t care what you spend it on,” replied Reverend Justice, who was intoxicated and worn out and unfulfilled from promoting his new neighborhood watch program that so far had not prevented a single crime. “You climb in and take care of me for a minute, and you can do what you want with this brand-new twenty-dollar bill I’m holding. See?”
The spinster, who turned out to be Uva Clot and was infinitely older than he had thought when he’d first spotted her in
the distant darkness, approached his Cadillac, wrote down his plate number, and started yelling for help. As Reverend Justice sped away, the police were on his butt with their sirens screaming and lights throbbing like his head.
“So, what you in for?” the reverend asked the dark area of the cell where Trader filled up the bed like a huge sack of potatoes.
“I’m a pirate,” Trader said in an ugly tone.
“Lord protect us all!” the reverend exclaimed in shock. “You ain’t one of them pirates that beat on that poor truck driver and stolt all his pumpkins, I sure hope?”
“None of your business!”
“Lord help us!”
“And I take pleasure in harming small animals,” Trader added, for he knew enough about psychopaths to be aware that all of them began their monstrous lives of violent crime by tormenting helpless creatures.
He, for example, had never felt a hint of remorse when he’d torched the crab plantation, murdering mothers and little babies and other molting crabs who were temporarily without their protective shells. He didn’t care a bit about the bateaus that had burned up, and it wouldn’t have bothered him at all if Hilda’s Chesapeake House had gone up in flames or if most of Tangier Island had. Nor had his peace of mind been disturbed when he had set up Hammer’s Boston terrier to be stolen by Smoke and his ruthless road dogs. Trader hoped Popeye had long since been put to a cruel end. It would serve that bitch superintendent right.
“Whoa,” Stick’s disapproving voice sounded in the dark cell. “That one thing I never done and never would. I think we should drown him in the toilet,” he said to the others. “Two of us hold him and whoever’s hands is free can shove his head in.”
“Someone run over my puppy when I was still in the eighth grade.” Slim Jim sounded sad and upset. “I never did get over that, and the asshole who done it didn’t even stop.”
“What’chu mean,
still in the eighth grade
?” Snitch was curious as he sat up in bed and shoved the pillow against cinderblock to support his cramping back.
“You know, I just couldn’t get out,” Slim Jim replied.
“Kinda like this place, you know? Every year, they said I had to repeat the eighth grade, all ’cause of that Mrs. Knock, my homeroom teacher.”
“Bet they was all kinds of
knock-knock
jokes flying around the eighth grade,” Stick observed.
“Un-huh. That was one of the things that pissed her off,” Slim Jim replied as he drifted back to that frustrating time in his failed life. “Knock-knock?”
He waited for a response from his cellmates. Finally the reverend caught on.
“Who’s there?” he asked.
“Shut up!” Trader blurted out in disgust.
“Shut up, who?” the reverend asked, relieved that a distraction had presented itself.
“Shut up the fucking pirate in the toilet bowl and flush his fucking brains out!”
“Yeah, how I know it wasn’t you who run over my puppy?” Slim Jim accused Trader’s bed.
“Because, for one thing,” Trader’s voice coldly replied, “it is highly unlikely I frequented your trashy neighborhood. No doubt you lived in federally subsidized housing and spent all of your time on the street eating free cheese and wearing stolen sneakers.”
“You dis me one more time,” Slim Jim threatened, “and I’m coming over there and popping you in the head before I stick it in the toilet and flush your soul to the sewer where it belong!”
“Please!” the reverend protested. “This is a time to pray for forgiveness and seek peace and love thy neighbor as thyself!”
“Ain’t never loved myself,” Snitch admitted, getting morose.
“Me, neither,” Slim Jim said sadly. “When my puppy got smashed in the road right in front of me, I quit loving myself. I ’cided never to love nothing again after that, ’cause if you love something, look what happens.”
“Tell it,” Stick chimed in.
P
OSSUM
was alone inside the RV, because Smoke and the other road dogs were out cruising, and Possum had used the
excuse of adding finishing touches to the Jolly Goodwrench flag so he could stay in with Popeye.
“You’ve got mail!” his computer suddenly announced.
Possum’s adrenaline surged in excitement. Most of the people he e-mailed were other pirates who were usually drunk, stoned, and away from their computers at this late hour. Possum got up and sat on the wooden crate, clicking the mouse to see what was in the e-mail box. He was thrilled and nervous when he saw that the sender was Trooper Truth:
Dear Anonymous,
You must be a good person to provide me with the important information you sent. I’ve been waiting to hear back from you, and since I haven’t, I decided to try to contact you now. You will be pleased to know that Captain Bonny (a.k.a. Major Trader) was apprehended earlier and is now in jail. I made sure this was accomplished, and now must ask you to hold up your end of the bargain.
What is the big plot that involves Popeye? And how do I know you’re telling me the truth? I’d like to believe you don’t intend for anyone else to be hurt. Where can we meet to resolve this, and how can we rescue Popeye?
Trooper Truth
Possum sat for a moment, excited but afraid for his life. If he set up Smoke and the road dogs and failed, he would be dead and so would Popeye. Possum petted Popeye, who had jumped up in his lap and seemed to be reading Trooper Truth’s e-mail, although Possum knew this wasn’t possible. No dog could read. Most people Possum knew couldn’t read, including the other road dogs. Even Smoke and his weirdo, nasty girlfriend had a hard time reading and usually got the information they wanted either from Possum or the TV news.
“What do I do, Popeye?” Possum whispered.
Popeye grabbed a pencil with her teeth and tapped the keyboard. Possum watched in disbelief as three words appeared on the screen in bold: JUST DO IT.
“Why didn’t you let me know you can read and write? You
even know the Nike ad!” Possum whispered as he hugged Popeye.
Popeye licked his neck. Oh, please save me, she silently begged.
“What you want me to do?” Possum asked again as the three words seemed to pulse on the screen like emergency lights that were roaring in for the rescue.
Popeye jumped out of his lap and up on the bed and began pawing the Jolly Goodwrench flag.
“You think that will really work?” Possum asked her. “I mean, that was my idea, too. How’d you know that was what I made that flag for? But what if it don’t work, Popeye? What if Smoke end up shooting all of us?”
Popeye curled up on the flag and went to sleep, as if to suggest she wasn’t worried in the least. She knew what Possum did not. Trooper Truth was really Andy Brazil, and Andy was fearless and would always prevail over evil. Popeye’s owner would, too. What Popeye wasn’t sure of was what might happen to Possum. She didn’t want him locked up or punished in any way. She woke up and jumped off the bed. She pawed at the bedroom door, indicating Possum should open it, which he did. Popeye trotted into the living room and dug through a pack of crumpled cards until she found the ace of spades, which she carried back to Possum.
“I ain’t sure I understand,” Possum whispered to her. “Oh, wait a minute. Maybe you telling me I got to have a card up my sleeve?”
Popeye just stared at him in a way that suggested he was getting warm but was missing the point.
“Or maybe I should play a game?”
Popeye didn’t react.
“I should bluff?”
Popeye was getting impatient. Why did humans have such a hard time understanding animals? Animals were explicit and didn’t lie or even shade the truth. Unless animals were sick or had been treated savagely, they had no agenda beyond surviving and being respected and loved. Popeye snatched the playing card out of Possum’s fingers and tossed it on the keyboard repeatedly, as if she were dealing.
“Deal?” Possum scratched his head, and Popeye licked his
bare foot, voicing her approval. “What you saying? I make a deal with Trooper Truth?”
Popeye jumped back up in Possum’s lap and licked his face with enthusiasm. Possum blew out a loud, tense sigh and began to type, just in time, because Andy was about to give up on getting a response.
Dear Trooper Truth,
I swear you can trust me. But my problem is, is I gonna get in trouble if I help you out? See, I’m sort of trapped by Smoke and the road dogs and if I set them up and even if it works, I’m afraid I’m gonna end up in jail.
See, it was me who shot Moses Custer in the foot, knocking his boot off, ’cause I had no choice or I would have been hurt bad by Smoke and maybe shot, too. And Smoke always be saying he gonna hurt Popeye if I don’t do what he say.
I don’t know what to do.
Andy read the e-mail and realized for the first time that the son of a bitch Smoke was behind Popeye’s dognapping. Andy knew that Smoke was not to be taken lightly. Andy also realized with relief that he was in a perfect position to make an honest bargain with whoever this anonymous road dog was, so he fired back an e-mail to him.