Authors: Chris Jordan
Dug has an old carbide Autolite affixed to his hat, the iden-
tical kind he uses when night hunting for alligator—pop that
light on and you see the eyes looking back at you from the
dark—but decides not to fire it up unless absolutely neces-
sary. Pop a light, she’ll know he’s coming and he prefers an
element of surprise. Plus, as he knows from experience,
human eyes don’t show red in the dark.
Best way to night hunt, move slowly, keep an ear cocked.
Many’s the time he’s heard a pig panting in the underbrush.
The pig is fearful, knows it’s being hunted and should be
silent, but it can’t help itself. It will pant, sometimes even
grunt like a person will grunt, thinking things over. Wants to
get downwind and that’s the challenge, to keep the scent ad-
vantage. Even a night like tonight, with the air so still, there’s
motion, a direction to carry smell.
Once, hunting raccoon at night, Dug killed one with his
knife, just to see if he could. Was it possible to stab a moving
coon in the dark? Turned out to be not that difficult, just hafta
know which way the coon would jump.
Dug has always known which way a hunted creature will
jump. He has no doubt he’ll know which way the girl will
jump, when it comes to that. He carries with him, into ter-
ritory he knows like the landscape of his own flesh, a skin-
ning knife, a pump shotgun, and his vast experience killing
things.
He crouches, using the tips of his fingers to find the ragged
trail they’ve left. He sniffs, holding the air in his nose, loving
the flavors. Flavor of swamp, flavor of grass, flavor of girl.
Kelly lies flat on her belly, sucking dirt. Her right arm hugs
Seth, keeping him down. He’s not exactly delirious but she
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can feel the heat of his fever and knows he isn’t thinking
clearly. How could he, after what he’s been through?
After the first dash to freedom it became clear that Seth
wouldn’t be going anywhere fast. She could help him along,
carry most of his weight, but that made for slow going over
uneven terrain in the dark.
“I was supposed to rescue you,” he’d mumbled, when
they finally stopped running and collapsed to the ground.
“Next time,” she’d said brightly, still high on adrenaline.
“I thought you were dead.”
“Me, too. I mean, I thought you were dead.”
“They cut me,” he’d said, showing her the wound.
Amazingly enough, it didn’t repulse her. Maybe in day-
light it would, but in the close darkness it didn’t really seem
all that bad. A little finger missing, no big deal. The rest of
him was half-starved and filthy, but intact. The problem was
that the wound had become infected and the infection had
spread most of the way up his arm. He was in terrible pain,
shivering from the fever, and it was absolutely essential that,
with the monster man so close, Seth remain absolutely mo-
tionless.
That’s how she thought of him, monster man. Obviously
she hadn’t hit him hard enough to do any real or lasting
damage.
When first she realized they were probably being followed,
she’d found a cluster of mangroves on a little mound of soggy
ground surrounded by water. The water was shallow, no more
than ankle deep, but she figured it would help cover their
tracks. That’s how they always did it in the movies. Some-
times in the movies they submerged under the water, breath-
ing through reeds, but Kelly was pretty sure that wouldn’t
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work in real life, and anyway this water wasn’t deep enough
for that.
The cluster of mangroves is thickly overgrown on the
outside, less so on the inside, and she believed that once she
and Seth had wormed their way inside their little hideaway
they’d be as good as invisible. There were lots of these small
overgrown areas dotting the area, hundreds probably, and
monster man couldn’t possibly search all of them. They’d be
safe so long as they didn’t move, didn’t give themselves
away.
Or maybe not. She has no idea how he managed it so
quickly, but monster man prowls along the water’s edge a
mere fifty yards from where they’re hiding.
Kelly touches Seth’s lips with her fingers, meaning
silence, and he nods that he understands.
Monster man blends into the darkness. He seems to be
going away, following the wrong track. She feels some of the
tension drain and hauls Seth closer.
Hot and muggy as it is, he’s shivering. With all her experi-
ence as a long-term patient in intensive care, she knows the
signs. She has to get Seth to a hospital in the not too distant
future or there’s a chance he will die from a raging blood in-
fection. Septicemia they call it. They’ll need to hang a bag,
drip him full of antibiotics.
In a few hours time Kelly Garner, age sixteen, has gone
from being totally focused on saving her own life to being
totally focused on saving the life of her best friend.
Best friends, as she knows, are not easy to come by.
When Kelly met Seth in the flesh for the first time her im-
pression was, the guy is too good to be true. Too handsome,
too smart, too kind, too generous, too everything. Later, after
he’d been tutoring her for several weeks, demonstrating in his
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calm clear way exactly how to fly safely, she decided that
sometimes first impressions are correct. He was the real deal,
a decent guy who wanted to help her without trying to get into
her pants.
Later on, when he’d finally taken her into his confidence—
he really had no one else to turn to—Kelly realized she’d
never been in any danger from Seth Manning. Not that kind
of danger, anyway. Not that being gay had diminished his
perfection in her eyes. If anything he was more perfect because
he was unobtainable, even if she’d decided to cross the age
barrier.
To see him like this, shivering in the heat, weak as a kitten,
his left hand wrapped in a bloody rag, it makes her want to
weep.
“Hang on,” she whispers. “We’re gonna make it, I promise.”
“Leave me,” he says. “Get away while you can.”
“Never,” she says. “You’re my favorite flyboy and I’m
keeping you. That’s final. Now try to snuggle closer.”
Monster man holds the air in his mouth. He’s picked up
the faintest whiff of human perspiration not his own. He
forces himself to relax, to melt his way into the landscape.
Not only smelling the smells, but sorting through the back-
ground noise of birds, water frogs, tree frogs, whining mos-
quitoes, scrabbling raccoons, splashing baitfish, gators small
and large, the whole wilderness mishmash.
What can’t be heard can help, too. A place where the
animals have left to make room for human. And he’s picking
up a beacon of silence, a quiet zone in one of the smaller
mangrove islands.
Thinking, as he glides into motion, you’re mine, little pig.
The squealing time is here.
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12. Best Keep Your Hands Inside The Pan
Zooming through the Everglades on an airboat at night is
like riding a dirt bike full speed through a pitch-black forest.
Not that I’ve ever been on a dirt bike, or in pitch-black forest,
for that matter. But it has to be something like this, the sheer
exhilarating terror of not knowing what’s out there and when
it might suddenly crash into you. Shadows, mangroves,
grasslands, open water, all blending into one dark and scary
blur. Every bump and scrape and feral swoosh of grass
against the flat bottom of the aluminum boat hits me like a
jolt of electricity, frying my nerves.
Leo Fish says not to worry. Fine. What I’m experiencing
isn’t so much worry as paralytic fear. Clinging to the little
seat, mouth tightly closed so the bugs can’t get in (more
advice from our improbable guide) muscles so tense they’ve
petrified, I can’t even scream.
First impression of Mr. Fish, he’s not exactly a people
person. He listens to Shane’s pitch—help us find my daughter
by finding Ricky Lang—nods his unenthusiastic assent, and
then gravely tells us that chances are we’re already too late.
“I can find him for you,” he says with a shrug. “But I can’t
fix what might already be done. Just so’s you know that from
the get-go.”
Shane apparently decides that the best thing is to be
affable. Ignore the morbid, misanthropic streak and engage
the man in conversation. The window of opportunity being
the trek between the motel and the Hunt Club dock, where
Ponytail has obligingly loaned his airboat to Leo Fish. On
foot, because Fish makes it clear he “can’t abide a car,” mean-
ing he won’t ride inside a vehicle. Too soon to say whether
that means he’s claustrophobic or just plain weird.
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“We understand that Ricky was married to your sister,”
Shane begins.
“Yup. My half sister Louisa Mae. My daddy took up with
a Seminole woman in his old age, and little Louisa Mae was
the result. Beautiful child. Beautiful woman, too. Ricky never
seen fit to marry her, being as she wasn’t Nakosha, but they
made ’em some babies. Two lovely girls and the cutest little
boy you ever did see.”
“I understand they died in a fire.”
“Died in a fire, yup, all of ’em.”
“And Ricky blames the tribe?”
The question stops Leo Fish in his tracks—he has the
look of a man who’s taken a surprise punch to the gut. “He
tell you that?”
“No, sir. Got it from the FBI, who got it from his girl-
friend.”
“So that’s what he told his girlfriend? The tribe did it?”
“Apparently.”
Leo Fish grunts, spits copiously. He stares down at his
naked feet, as if trying to decide who to kick. “That’s a damn
lie. Tribe ain’t had nothin’ to do with it. Ricky Lang set fire
to that house himself. Killed Louisa and the kids, whether he
meant to or not. It’s on him, all that death.”
Now it’s Randall Shane who looks stunned. “Lang killed
his own children?”
Fish responds with a curt nod and says, “He’d had this
fancy new house built on the reservation, and then he and
Louisa Mae got to fighting—might have been over this girl-
friend you mentioned. Upshot is, she refused to let Ricky into
his own house, and that’s when he said he’d sooner burn it
down then let her live there. Louisa Mae, she’s a feisty one,
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she called the tribal police, but they refused to intervene
’cause Ricky was the big man.”
“So he burned the house down with them in it?”
“Not exactly. Man always had a crazy temper. What
happen, he come out one night when they were all in bed,
woke ’em up, and forced ’em all out of the house. Standing
there in their pajamas, the three kids, and Louisa Mae cursing
him for the devil. Then he sets the place afire with gasoline,
to prove he can do what he likes with his own house. After
he throws the match and sees the fire spreading, he takes off
in his boat, in case the tribal police showed up after all.
Leaves the kids weeping but alive. What he didn’t figure on,
after he was gone, little Troy ran back inside to get his new
puppy, they had it in one of those puppy crates for training
purposes, and Louisa and the two girls ran after him. The roof
came down and they all perished.”
“He was never prosecuted?”
Fish tugs at his straw cowboy hat, as if intending to screw
it onto his head. “You got to understand about Ricky Lang.
He made that tribe. They was just a collection of nobodies,
not Seminole, not Miccosukee, not white neither, until Ricky
got ’er done.”
According to Fish, the Nakosha are really more of an ex-
tended family than a tribe. Cousins within cousins, most of
them called some variation of Lang, after a Methodist mis-
sionary who had been absorbed into the family at the turn of
the twentieth century. In addition to fathering fourteen chil-
dren with three successive Indian wives, the Reverend Robert
Lang had initiated the long and arduous process of seeking
tribal recognition. Robert Lang had argued that unlike the
Seminole, his adopted tribe were descended from a distinct
band of the original Calusa who had been living on this land
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when the conquistadors first splashed into the great swamp,
looking for El Dorado, or the Fountain of Youth or, failing
that, to copulate with the native women. Lang’s bureaucratic
battle had been carried on by successive generations, and had
not been resolved until ten years ago, when the tribe had been
granted dominion over a hundred square miles of boggy,
mosquito-infested swampland, most of which was sub-
merged during the rainy season, and therefore of minimal
interest to developers. Ricky Lang was instrumental in trans-
forming the Nakosha bingo license into a giant casino