(Forge
Books, hardcover, ISBN 0-765-30011-7)
Prologue
Jimbo
glanced over his shoulder and spoke to his babies, jostling in the back
of the shorty school bus. Hang on, sweethearts. Were in
the home stretch, now. No more than half a mile down the road,
his chin bumped his chest and he bobbed awake. He white-knuckled the
wheel, and shook his head, fast. Coffee. What I need is coffee.
And more beer. Jimbo fired up a cigarette, nearly missed the pull-off
to Big Earls Truckers Rest. Shifting a sluggish foot to
the brake, he angled from the road onto gravel--a bit too abruptly,
thanks to five hours of bleary-eyed, pre-dawn driving and three quarts
of drown-the-highway-blues beer sloshing under his loosened belt. He
overcorrected, hit the pedal hard, and felt the bus slip into a four-wheel
skid. Oh, mama!
In
a cloud of dust and skittering pea-gravel, the bus came to rest four
feet from plate glass, eight from a hands-on-hips waitress, with three
breakfast specials soaking her once-white Easy Spirit sneakers. Jimbo
touched his safari hat with a friendly grin and shook the dregs of his
third quart onto the seat to douse the dislodged tip of his smoke, fast
burning a mean black hole in the vinyl. He eased away, drove to the
blind side of the building and wiped his forehead with the back of an
arm. Whew-ee, boy, he said to his reflection in the rearview
mirror. That was close.
The grin disappeared as Jimbo remembered his cargo. Shee-it!
My babies. He parted the heavy drapes behind the drivers
seat, flew into the back to the sound of ten thousand strips of bacon
crackling on a hell-hot griddle. Calm down! Calm down, sweethearts.
Waving the air. No harm done.
A hundred built-in wooden cages with metal mesh doors lined the
walls of the seatless bus. Inside the cages, none too happy, writhed
Jungle Jimbo Bybees babies: four hundred and thirty-six fresh-caught
timber rattlesnakes, Crotalus horridus. Ssshhh, said
Jimbo. Not that his deaf charges heard him, not that he heard himself
over the rattling, hissing, and, worse, thumping of scaly noses striking
metal screen doors. Settle down, babies, Jimbo pleaded.
And, gradually, they did. He moved slowly along the tiers of cages,
counting noses, more accurately inspecting them, hopeful to see no damaged
merchandise. Crimson marred a mere dozen battered reptilian prows. Could
be worse.
In pristine condition, his babies would bring from forty to sixty
dollars apiece. This was Jimbos first-of-the-season snake run to the
serpent handlers in the cities to the north: Cincinnati, Dayton, Columbus,
Cleveland, Detroit, Chicago. The parent churches in the mountains caught
their own, but the clandestine, big-city, tiny but true-to-the-faith splinter
cults depended upon Jungle Jimbo Bybee, looked to his arrival each spring
like kids lusting for the first tingaling of the Mister Softee
truck.
Jimbo owned Jungle Jimbo Bybees Serpentarium in Cave City,
Kentucky, a hundred and fifty miles to the west. He had left Cave City ten
days ago on a buying route that took him through the lowlands of Alabama,
Georgia, and South Carolina. Now, he was headed north, through eastern Kentucky,
Daniel Boone country. It had been a good circuit, promised to pay the major
share of the behemoth four-by-four Jimbo had dreamt of all winter. The next
trip, hed mix in some economical copperheads (no cottonmouths or diamondback
rattlers--too feisty even for the Lords work), but Jimbo knew when
he rolled into those snake-starved cities on his first visit with only high-ticket,
off-the-ark-perfect, colorful, southern timber rattlers, hed move
every one.
Had he been transporting snakes for himself or reptile collectors,
he would have carried them in tied-off gunny sacks, but Jimbo learned years
ago that seeing all the merchandise at once, in a confined space, induced
an electric, nigh-on sexual mania in the snake preachers. Thus the blacked-out
windows, the cedar cages, the Heavens Gold shag carpet, the boom box
with the hymns, the royal blue paint, the Gothic script on the sides--They
shall take up serpents, and it shall not hurt them--and the twin bumper
stickers: Mark 16:18, and John 3:3.
Jimbo fueled up, bought a cello-wrapped egg salad sandwich, a large
coffee, and two more quarts of cold beer--enough to get him through the
next three dry counties, Galloway, Bradford, and McAfee--and hit the road
on the last leg to Cincinnati. Eight miles inside the McAfee County line,
winding through hilly country, a small town in a valley to his left, a forested
ridge to his right, Jimbo cranked up the radio--Willie Nelson, singing A
Redheaded Stranger--and took a long pull on the second quart. Feelin
good.
He recalled the warning from the cashier: Keep that foot light
on the pedal through McAfee County, friend. Thats one tough county--has
a hard-assed sheriff who loves his radar, keeps close company with the judge.
Jimbo checked the speedometer--uh-oh--let off the gas, and scanned the road
for cops.
Whoa, Nellie! Coming his way at sixty-five miles an hour:
not a cop, but the unmistakable sinuous silhouette of a heavy-bodied serpent
crossing the highway. A rattler, for sure. No chance of stopping in time
or swerving, so Jimbo kept his eyes on the slowly undulating form and worked
the wheel to center the snake safely between the buss front tires.
Yes! He watched it fly by below, unscathed. He tapped the brakes, already
picturing the trot back, lifting the sassy timber with his snake hook, and
adding an easy sixty bucks to the pot.
What Jimbo saw when he looked up, however, was--YEOW!--
a hairpin curve, fence--Kee-rack!--then open air. The bus soared thirty
feet, slowed as it swished through treetops, and--Whack!--stopped in the
flick of an eye, wedged between two mammoth oaks. Jimbo, however, kept going,
through the windshield and another forty feet before smacking into the gnarly
trunk of an Indian cigar tree.
The late Jungle Jimbo Bybees custom cedarwood cages ripped
from the buss crimped walls with the impact. Within minutes, well
before the smoking engine ignited dripping fuel and sent a snick of crackling
orange fire along the underbelly of the chassis toward the fractured fuel
tank, four hundred and thirty-six buzzing, shaken-up timber rattlesnakes
crawled to the floor, dropped through the sprung doors to the ground, and
headed for the hills, or the town, or the surrounding homes and farms of
McAfee County, Kentucky, with freedom on their minds.
Chapter
1
Digger
Fitz twined his fingers through the stiff wire mesh two feet from his nose
and shook the grid. Solid. He felt for the cars rear door handle,
looked for the window crank.Missing.
Damned cop. Mumbling. Said he was taking me to
see Edgar. Instead, hes got me caged in here like some animal.
A scared rodent thumped and bumped in his chest as the old cop fear
took hold. He squinted through the glass. Where the hell did the man go?
There--ten paces away, talking with a little guy in western boots and a
black cowboy hat wide as his shoulders. The sheriff, Ill bet. Edgars
hurt, and these Kentucky good old boys are in no hurry at all.
With the air conditioning off, the windows closed, and the morning
sun baking the big Crown Victoria, the temperature rose fast. Digger wrinkled
his nose at the traces of booze, sweat, and the deputys fried chicken.
Eight in the morning and the man was chowing down on it.
He waggled the mesh again and cursed, a touch of panic in his voice.
Edgar. Where are you Edgar? He tugged at his once-reddish, now
going-to-gray beard, scanned the interior, and saw, nearly hidden under
the front seat, three inches from his white-socked, sandaled toes: a neatly-wrapped
joint, thick and long as his little finger. Digger had a flashback of postgrad
days, of Berkeley and redwoods, a droning sitar, ardent young women with
ironed hair to their waists, peace rallies and ban-the-bomb placards. The
good old days. With no thought and a furtive swoop, he snagged the joint
and dropped it in his shirt pocket.
He sat bolt upright as the trunk lid opened, and then slammed. A
swollen belly materialized at the window, curly black hairs matted to sweaty
white skin bulging past a sprung button. Diggers hand flopped over
his pocket as he caught sight of the king-sized deputy, his face screwed
up, Gotcha written all over it. The panic returned. Busted.
But
no, the deputy was merely hacking up farm dust. He spit to the side, opened
the front door and fished a chicken leg from a red and white paper bucket
on the seat. Sorry about the wait, he said, and, finally, let
Digger out. He nodded to several of his cohorts. In the black hat,
near the shack. Thats Coony McCoy, McAfee County Sheriff.
Digger
climbed out with an uneasy glance at the cars, ominous with their blazing
roof hardware and stars on the doors. He saw cops in khaki, wearing tan
cowboy hats with guns at their hips. All popped out of the same mold. All
trouble.
continued . . . |