Authors: Carl Hiaasen
“I can’t think of anything. Except maybe you’re some kinda snitch for the cops.”
“Be serious, young man.” Again with the needle in her voice, worse than his mother. “Don’t mention this to anyone.”
“Who the hell would believe it? Ten grand, I swear.”
“Call me when you get out.”
“Be a while,” he said. “Hey, is it too late to get me in on that ulcer deal?”
That was six months ago.
Bud Schwartz touched the place on his brow where the rent-a-cop’s flashlight had clobbered him. He could feel a scabby eruption the size of a golf ball. “Damn,” he said, opening his eyes slowly.
Molly McNamara moved closer and stood over him. She was wearing her reading glasses with the pink roses on the frames. She said, “Your friend is in the bedroom.”
“Danny’s back?”
“I was on my way here when I spotted him at the Farm Stores. He tried to get away, but—”
“You didn’t shoot him again?” Bud Schwartz was asking more out of curiosity than concern.
“No need to,” said Molly. “I had the Cadillac. I think your friend realized there’s no point in getting run over.”
With a wheeze, Bud Schwartz sat up. His ears pounded and stomach juices bubbled up sourly in his throat. As always, Molly was prompt with the first aid. She handed him a towel filled with chipped ice and told him to pack it against his wound.
Danny Pogue clumped into the living room and sat on the other end of the sofa. “You look like shit,” he said to Bud Schwartz.
“Thank you, Tom Selleck.” From under the towel Bud Schwartz glared with one crimson eye.
Molly McNamara said, “That’s enough, the both of you. I can’t begin to tell you how much trouble you’ve caused.”
“We was trying to get out of your hair is all,” said Danny Pogue. “Why’re you keeping us prisoners?”
Molly said, “Aren’t we being a bit melodramatic? You are not prisoners. You’re simply two young men in my employ until I decide otherwise.”
“In case you didn’t hear,” said Bud Schwartz, “Lincoln freed the slaves a long time ago.”
Molly McNamara ignored the remark. “At the gatehouse I had to tell Officer Andrews a lie. I told him you were my nephews visiting from Georgia. I told him we’d had a fight and that’s why you were trying to sneak out of Eagle Ridge. I told him your parents died in a plane crash when you were little, and I was left responsible for taking care of you.”
“Pitiful,” said Bud Schwartz.
“I told him you both had emotional problems.”
“We’re heading that direction,” Bud Schwartz said.
“I don’t like to lie,” Molly added sternly. “Normally I don’t believe in it.”
“But shooting people is okay?” Danny Pogue cackled bitterly. “Lady, pardon me for saying, but I think you’re goddamn fucking nutso.”
Molly’s eyes flickered. In a frozen voice she said, “Please don’t use that word in my presence.”
Danny Pogue mumbled that he was sorry. He wasn’t sure which word she meant.
“I’m not certain Officer Andrews believed any of it,” Molly went on. “I wouldn’t be surprised if he reported the entire episode to the condominium association. You think you’ve got problems now! Oh, brother, just wait.”
Bud Schwartz removed the towel from his forehead and examined it for bloodstains. Molly said, “Are you listening to me?”
“Hanging on every word.”
“Because I’ve got some very bad news. For all of us.”
Bud Schwartz grunted wearily. What now? What the hell now?
“It was on the television tonight,” Molly McNamara said. “The mango voles are dead. Killed on the highway.”
Nervously Danny Pogue glanced at his partner, whose eyes were fixed hard on the old woman. Waiting, no doubt, to see if she pulled that damn pistol from her sweater.
Molly said, “I don’t know all the details, but I suppose it’s not important. I feel absolutely sick about this.”
Good, thought Bud Schwartz, maybe she’s not blaming us.
But she was. “If only I’d known how careless and irresponsible you were, I would never have recruited you for this job.” Molly took off her rose-framed glasses and folded them meticulously. Her gray eyes were misting.
“The blue-tongued mango voles are extinct because of me,” she said, blinking, “and because of you.”
Bud Schwartz said, “We’re real sorry.”
“Yeah,” agreed Danny Pogue. “It’s too bad they died.”
Molly was downcast. “This is an unspeakable sin against Nature.
The death of these dear animals. I can’t tell you—it goes against everything I’ve worked for, everything I believe in. I was so stupid to entrust this project to a couple of reckless, clumsy criminals.”
“That’s us,” said Bud Schwartz.
Danny Pogue didn’t like his partner’s casual tone. He said to Molly, “We didn’t know they was so important. They looked like regular old rats.”
The old woman absently fondled the buttons of her sweater. “There’s no point belaboring it. The damage is done. Now we’ve got to atone.”
“Atone,” said Bud Schwartz suspiciously.
“What does that mean?” asked Danny Pogue. “I don’t know that word.”
Molly said, “Tell him, Bud.”
“It means we gotta do something to make up for all this.”
Molly nodded. “That’s right. Somehow we must redeem ourselves.”
Bud Schwartz sighed. He wondered what crazy lie she’d told the rent-a-cop about their gunshot wounds. And this condo association—what’s she so worried about?
“Have you ever heard of the Mothers of Wilderness?” asked Molly McNamara.
“No,” said Bud Schwartz, “can’t say that I have.” Danny Pogue said he’d never heard of them, either.
“No matter,” said Molly, brightening, “because as of tonight, you’re our newest members. Congratulations, gentlemen!”
Restlessly Danny Pogue squeezed a pimple on his neck. “Is it like a nature club?” he said. “Do we get T-shirts and stuff?”
“Oh, you’ll enjoy it,” said Molly. “I’ve got some pamphlets in my briefcase.”
Bud Schwartz clutched at the damp towel. This time he
pressed it against his face. “Cut to the chase,” he muttered irritably. “What the hell is it you want us to do?”
“I’m coming to that,” said Molly McNamara. “By the way, did I mention that Mr. Kingsbury is offering a reward to anyone who turns in the vole robbers?”
“Oh, no,” said Danny Pogue.
“Quite an enormous reward, according to the papers.”
“How nice,” said Bud Schwartz, his voice cold.
“Oh, don’t worry,” Molly said. “I wouldn’t dream of saying anything to the authorities.”
“How could you?” Danny Pogue exclaimed. “You’re the one asked us to rob the place!”
Molly’s face crinkled in thought. “That’d be awfully hard to swallow, that an old retired woman like myself would get involved in such a distasteful crime. I suppose the FBI would have to decide whom to believe—two young fellows with your extensive criminal pasts, or an older woman like myself who’s never even had a parking ticket.”
Danny Pogue angrily pounded the floor with one of his crutches. “For someone who don’t like to lie, you sure do make a sport of it.”
Bud Schwartz stretched out on the sofa, closed his eyes and smiled in resignation. “You’re a piece of work,” he said to Molly McNamara. “I gotta admit.”
The Card Sound Bridge is a steep two-lane span that connects the northern tip of Key Largo with the South Florida mainland. Joe Winder got there two hours early, at ten o’clock. He parked half a mile down the road and walked the rest of the way. He staked out a spot on some limestone boulders, which formed a jetty under the eastern incline of the bridge. From there Winder
could watch for the car that would bring the mystery caller to this meeting.
He knew it wouldn’t be Dr. Will Koocher; Nina was never wrong about phone voices. Joe Winder had no intention of confronting the impostor, but at least he wanted to get a good look, maybe even a tag number.
Not much was biting under the bridge. Effortlessly Winder cast the same pink wiggle-jig he’d been using on the bonefish flats. He let it sink into the fringe of the sea grass, then reeled in slowly, bouncing the lure with the tip of his rod. In this fashion he picked up a couple of blue runners and a large spiny pinfish, which he tossed back. The other fishermen were using dead shrimp with similar unexciting results. By eleven most of them had packed up their buckets and rods and gone home, leaving the jetty deserted except for Joe Winder and two other diehards.
The other men stood side by side, conversing quietly in Spanish. As Joe Winder watched them more closely, it seemed that the men were doing more serious talking than fishing. They were using Cuban yo-yo rigs, twirling the lines overhead and launching the baits with a loud plop into the water. Once in a while they’d pull in the lines and cast out again, usually without even checking the hooks.
One of the men was a husky no-neck in long canvas pants. The other was short and wiry, and as dark as coffee. Both wore baseball caps and light jackets, which was odd, considering the heat. Every few minutes a pair of headlights would appear down Card Sound Road, and Joe Winder would check to see if the car stopped at the foot of the bridge. After a while, he noticed that the two other fishermen were doing the same. This was not a good sign.
As midnight approached, the other men stopped pretending to fish and concentrated on the road. Joe Winder realized that he was stranded on the jetty with two goons who probably were
waiting to ambush him. Worse, they stood squarely between Winder and the relative safety of the island. The most obvious means of escape would be jumping into Card Sound; while exceptionally dramatic, such a dive would prove both stupid and futile. The bay was shallow and provided no cover; if the goons had guns, they could simply shoot him like a turtle.
Joe Winder’s only hope was that they wouldn’t recognize him in the dark with his hair hacked off. It was a gray overcast night, and he was doing a creditable impersonation of a preoccupied angler. Most likely the goons would be expecting him at twelve sharp, some dumb shmuck hollering Koocher’s name under the bridge.
The strategy of staying invisible might have worked if only a powerful fish had not seized Joe Winder’s lure. The strike jolted his arms, and reflexively he yanked back hard to set the hook. The fish streaked toward the rocks, then back out again toward open water. The buzz of Winder’s reel cut like a saw through the stillness of the bay. The two goons stopped talking and looked up to see what was happening.
Joe Winder knew. It was a snook, a damn big one. Any other night he would have been thrilled to hook such a fish, but not now. From the corner of his eye he could see the goons rock-hopping down the jetty so they could better view the battle. Near a piling the fish broke to the surface, shaking its gills furiously before diving in a frothy silver gash. The goons pointed excitedly at the commotion, and Winder couldn’t blame them; it was a grand fish.
Joe Winder knew what to do, but he couldn’t bring himself to do it. Palm the spool. Break the damn thing off, before the two guys got any closer. Instead Joe Winder was playing the fish like a pro, horsing it away from the rocks and pilings, letting it spend itself in short hard bursts. What am I, crazy? Winder thought. From up here I could never land this fish alone. The goons would
want to help, sure they would, and then they’d see who I was and that would be it. One dead snook and one dead flack.
Again the fish thrust its underslung snout from the water and splashed. Even in the tea-colored water the black lateral stripe was visible along its side. Twelve pounds easy, thought Winder. A fine one.
One of the goons clapped his hands and Joe Winder looked up. “Nize goying,” the man said. “Dat’s some fugging fish.” It was the short wiry one.
“Thanks,” said Winder. Maybe he was wrong. Maybe these weren’t the bad guys, after all. Or maybe they hadn’t come to hurt him; maybe they just wanted to talk. Maybe they had Koocher and were scheming for a ransom.
After five minutes of back-and-forth, the snook was tiring. Twenty yards from the jetty it glided to the surface and flopped its tail once, twice. Not yet, Winder thought; don’t give up yet, you marvelous bastard.
He heard their heavy footsteps on the rocks. Now they were behind him. He heard their breathing. One of them was chewing gum. Joe Winder smelled hot spearmint and beer.
“What’re you waiting for?” asked the big one.
“He’s not ready,” Winder said, afraid to turn and give them a look at his face. “He’s still got some gas.”
“No, look at the fugging thin,” said the little one. “He juice about dead, mang.”
The snook was dogging it on top, barely putting a bend in Joe Winder’s fishing rod.
“That’s some good eating,” the big no-neck goon remarked.
Winder swallowed dryly and said, “Too bad they’re out of season.”
He heard both of the men laugh. “Hey, you don’t want him, we’ll take it off your hands. Fry his ass up in a minute. Right, Angel?”
The little one, Angel, said, “Yeah, I go down and grab hole the fugging thin.” He took off his baseball cap and scrabbled noisily down the rocks.
Joe Winder got a mental picture of these two submorons in yellowed undershirts—swilling beer, watching “Wheel” on the tube—cooking up the snook on a cheap gas stove in some rathole Hialeah duplex. The thought of it was more than he could stand. He placed his hand on the spool of the reel and pulled once, savagely.
The snook had one good powerful surge left in its heart, and the fishing line snapped like a rifle shot. Joe Winder fell back, then steadied himself. “Goddammit,” he said, trying to sound disappointed.
“That was really stupid,” said the big goon. “You don’t know shit about fighting a fish.”
“I guess not.”
The wiry one had been waiting by the water when the fish got off. Cursing in Spanish, he monkeyed back up the rocks. To guide himself, he held a small flashlight in one hand. The beam caught Joe Winder flush in the face; there was nothing he could do.
Instantly the big goon grabbed him by the shoulder. “Hey! You work at the park.”
“What park?”
The wiry one said, “Doan tell me he’s the guy.”
“Yup,” said the big one, tightening his grip.
The men edged closer. Joe Winder could sense they were angry about not recognizing him sooner.