Nobody's Fool
sweeping gesture that took in the whole desert, from the ground they were standing on all the way to California. âWhatâs the first thing you notice?â Before Clive Jr. could speak, Collins answered. âNo water. Not a drop. So how come these cities keep growing? Dallas. Phoenix. Tucson. Itâs because people believethere will be water. And theyâre right. If people keep moving, theyâll pipe water all the way from Antarctica if they have to. Trust me. You come back here in two years, and thereâll be the prettiest little lake you ever saw, right out there, a fountain in the middle of it, shooting water fifty feet in the air. The only thing that can stop it from happening is if about half the people who have already invested their money get cold feet. If that happens, there wonât be enough water out here to support a family of Gila monsters. Weâre talking faith here, Clive. Trust that billboard, because itâs the future, sure as shootinâ, or if it isnât weâre all fucked.â
Clive Jr. had learned his lesson, trusted the billboard. The first thing heâd done was put up one of his own, announcing his faith in the future. It had seemed to him that Collins was right and that he himself, Clive Jr., was the man to bring the message home. Bathâs problem, he saw, in light of this revelation, was a lack of faith, a timidity, a small-mindedness. Two hundred years ago the citizens of Bath had not believed in Jedediah Halseyâs Sans Souci, his grand hotel in the wilderness, with its three hundred rooms. Imagine. Scoffing at a manâs faith in the future. No wonder God had allowed their springs to run dry.
From where Clive Jr. sat alongside the road at the entrance to Carl Roebuckâs development, he could see the demonic clown billboard in the distance on the other side of the highway. A couple of months ago heâd overheard two employees at the bank agree that the clown bore a striking resemblance to himself. No doubt theyâd soon be referring to the failed project as Cliveâs Folly. He adjusted his rearview so that he could see his own reflection, examine his own features âafter the fallâ to see if he could spot the resemblance. Not much, he decided. Actually, he took after his father, a fact for which heâd often given profound thanks. And yet, it now occurred to him, imagining Clive Sr. the way heâd looked when Clive Jr. was a boy, his father had what could only be described as a pointed head, which was why he always wore a baseball cap, even in the house when Miss Beryl would let him. Clive Sr. had seemed to understand that when he took it off, with his virtuous, close-cropped hair and his large ears, he was, well, funny-looking.
Clive Jr. readjusted the rearview, regarded the gray exhaust escaping from the Continentalâs tailpipe and tried, as heâd been trying all morning, to stave off panic, the worst panic he could recall feeling since he was a boy fearful of a beating at the hands of a gang of neighborhood bullies. Were he sitting in a closed garage, it occurred to him, this very same behavior would be the death of him. But as it was the plumes of blue smokedissipated harmlessly, or at least invisibly, into the wide world of air and earth and water.
Had Sully been the sort of man to indulge regret, heâd have regretted not having done his laundry before going to jail. Socks seemed to be the main problem. Or rather, the complete absence of clean socks. Dirty ones were his long suit. He thought of Carl Roebuckâs bureau, so full of socks and underwear, a monthâs supply, and felt a stab of envy. âWe gotta make a quick stop at the menâs store,â he called out to Wirf, who snorted awake on the sofa where heâd fallen asleep watching television while Sully was in the shower. âWhat?â
Sully slipped into his dress shoes, barefoot. âI gotta get some socks.â Silence a moment for this to compute. âHow does a man in jail run out of socks?â
âEasy,â Sully explained from the doorway. âI was out of socks when I went in. This look okay?â
In addition to having no clean socks, he was also missing the pants that matched his suit jacket. Had he been a betting man, and he was, heâd have bet they were at the dry cleanerâs and had been since the last time he wore his suit. Which would have been when? Things he took to the dry
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