Shock Wave
talked to Charlie—one of the techs—and he says Haden’s computer history was wiped, but he forgot about the cookies. He was looking at bomb sites—”
Virgil interrupted: “But he could always say that he got interested when the bombings started in Butternut, and did some research.”
Barlow shook his head and continued: “. . . and some of the cookies go back before the Pye Pinnacle.”
“That’s large,” Virgil said. “That’s very large.”
A PART OF THE CROWD began running and screaming and they looked that way, and then somebody came back and said, “George Peck fell in the lake. He’s okay. Just drunk.”
Jeanne Shepard came ghosting through the crowd. She looked tired, but relaxed, wore a sheer white blouse and turquoise Capri pants and sandals, and looked, as Thor the desk clerk once told Virgil, like the second-hottest woman in town. She nodded at Virgil, and then came over and said, “I hope you don’t mind if I’m here. I heard about John Haden, and you know . . . I wanted to hear more.”
“Hey, you’re more than welcome,” Virgil said. “Join right in. Let me get you a drink.”
He got her a Bloody Mary and a thoroughly soaked George Peck lurched over and said to her, “Jeanne, nice to see you. With Jesus Christ as my witness, I say to you, I am seriously fucked up.”
“Why, George,” she said, “I’ve never heard such language.” To Virgil: “George and I once dated.”
They turned away, talking about old times, and Virgil drifted off; a few seconds later, Thor the desk clerk idled into the room, wearing cargo shorts and a Third Eye Blind T-shirt. When Virgil saw it, he said, “God bless me: I will give you one hundred dollars for that T-shirt.”
“I could get three times that on eBay,” Thor said. He had a toothpick in one corner of his mouth, and a drink in his hand.
Virgil looked at it and asked, “How old are you again?”
“Eighteen. But I’m a jock, so it’s okay,” Thor said. “I’m just keeping an eye on that little heifer.” He was watching Jeanne Shepard.
“I don’t want to hear about it,” Virgil said.
“Well, if you heard about it, you’d probably change your mind and say you were glad you heard about it,” Thor said.
Virgil began, “Listen, Thor—”
“I don’t need a lecture,” the kid said. “We’re running really hot right now. I figure it’ll last for most of the summer, then she’ll go back to teaching school and I’ll go off to college and that’ll be it. But I sure don’t need any sermonizing. I mean, it’s just too good.”
“I was gonna tell you, don’t drink too much—I once had a few beers and ran my old man’s car into a ditch and missed a big old cottonwood by about six inches. I was very lucky I didn’t kill myself,” Virgil said. “Scratched the hell out of the passenger-side door.”
“Semper fi,” Thor said. “Jeez, you know, Jeanne’s got an ass like . . .” He stopped, his voice trailing away, then he whispered, “Jesus God: Who’s the chick with the snake on her neck?”
LATE IN THE EVENING, Ahlquist hooked Virgil’s arm and dragged him into a room behind the bar, saying, “You gotta take a minute.”
When they got back there, they found Chapman and Pye, Barlow and Peck and O’Hara, and Pye said, “It’s an ugly thing to have to do, but I’m a man of my word and I’m willing to pay up.”
At that point, Virgil took part in an unusual ceremony, wildly applauded by the spectators. Pye muttered, “Now I really need a drink,” and O’Hara said to Virgil, “You gotta nice ass there, surfer boy.”
Chapman wrote it all down.
THE PARTY WENT ON for a while, but at some point after midnight, Virgil found himself sitting on his motel bed, talking to Davenport, a night owl, who’d seen cuts from the press conference on the late news.
“Get that cleaned up as fast as you can—we’ve got some trouble down in Wabasha,” Davenport said.
“Somebody’s dead?”
“Well, since they only found the feet, they’re not sure. But, that’s what they suspect,” Davenport said.
“Ah, man, how old?”
“Six, eight weeks. The newest two, anyway,” Davenport said.
“The newest two?”
“Yeah, they found three feet. People down there are talking cannibals.”
“Ah, boy . . .”
Davenport said, “I can hear a shower running . . . so . . . I guess I’ll hang up now. But call me tomorrow, as soon as you’re clear of the Haden thing. You gotta
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