A Study in Interruption
Obsession. It鈥檚 not just a perfume. It鈥檚 been around a long time. Obsession might help explain prehistoric cave paintings of big game. 鈥淎 Study in Interruption鈥 is taken from The Adventures of Rhesus A. Macaque, Private Investigator (illustrations by Daniel Mawyer). In the science fiction world of Macaque and his partner Guy Poisson, centuries have passed since the Sea Change, an unexpected rise in ocean levels. The Sea Change triggered the breakup of the Federal Empire, but eventually the great old patterns of American settlerism have begun to reassert themselves. As this story illustrates, that future society is obsessed with crime. The last story in this issue of Vice-Versa, it is set in the criminal underworld of Lanta, port city and capital of Dixie, and suggests that obsession will still be a complex problem centuries from now.
L鈥檋omme des Ombres
If Guy Poisson really had a home anywhere鈥攏ot counting granny鈥檚 bamboo stilt longhouse in the Arkansas swamps鈥攊t was Lanta, the capital city of Dixie. A first-class Texas Seaway ferry ticket to Lanta cost Guy a two inch stack of paper currency, but the company funds of Poisson and Macaque, Private Investigators were over a foot thick and the ticket was worth every pfennig. A generous tipper, Guy鈥檚 voyage was pleasant, uneventful, well lubricated and tastily fed. Guy arrived clean and rested, and headed straight for his favorite part of town, Lanta鈥檚 famous Broad Street, where there was a nice selection of gentlemen鈥檚 flop houses. On the corner of Broad and Mammal Avenue he saw a 鈥淔or Rent: Make an Offer鈥 sign on the top floor of a classic two-story wood-frame cracker box. Just for laughs he knocked on the door and offered the box-shaped cracker who answered it a lowly pittance of a rent, about half the going rate. The grizzled pink boob, a nervous look on his ugly mug, gratefully accepted at once. To Guy鈥檚 amazement he suddenly had the lease on a walk-up office, which came furnished and had a back room large enough to sleep in. This was a supernaturally surprising bargain.
Maybe it wasn鈥檛 as suspicious as it sounded. The previous tenant, a professional fortune-teller, had skipped out. There was a creepy sign suitable for repainting on the discreet side stairs leading up to the office. In addition to the usual furniture, the front room included concealed strings and pulleys, interesting mirrors, red velvet curtains, a black light setup, jar of phosphorescent powder, Tarot deck, crystal ball, stand for same, et cetera. The back room included spare clothes in a chest of drawers. Capes and fancy vests, slightly too large, but Guy was absolutely going to wear this stuff. No wonder the previous tenant had to skip out. Over-spender. Abandoned his clothes. Left ten dollars mixed with the socks in the underwear drawer. Inexplicable.
The office came with a cat named Pompilius, a huge, indolent, desperately ingratiating creature hand-trained to the s茅ance racket. Pompilius, maybe because of all that training, suffered from preternatural insight into his utter dependence on cat food. He could not open the cans himself or even infer or deduce where the cans really came from, an existential plight that might ruin a human. The effect on a cat was pitiable. Pompilius was terribly relieved when Guy rented the place.
Guy decided not to remove the fortune-telling apparatus. There鈥檚 all kinds of detectives, he decided. The s茅ance setup could be used. Some cleaning was necessary, for instance the nearly realistic blood spatter on the wall and the tacky merlot-colored drag marks on the floor. Maybe that kind of stuff was OK for goth-psychic d茅cor, but not a P.I.鈥檚 office. Soon the office sign read:
Guy Poisson, Homme des Ombres
Private Psychic Investigator
Around this point in the business plan, Guy bought his usual weekly copy of The Daily Hominid, the American Exarchate鈥檚 newspaper of record. He was shocked to see the face of his partner, Rhesus A. Macaque, or a photogravure thereof, looming above the fold next to DESTRUCTION OF SALT LAKE CITY SOLVED. This was, officially, a very big deal. The pillaging of Salt Lake and Pueblo was widely considered important. For weeks everybody in North America wanted to know: was it politics? Crime? Old Testament stuff? Maybe just a local war? Now the solution was on the front page, cut into slices and laid out like white bread by the Macaque Sleuth. Even the Tedboro horse rustling case, Guy鈥檚 most recent personal failure, was mentioned as a sort of footnote or pickle on this detective sandwich, which somehow read like an epic. Nowhere did the article mention Guy Poisson. That seemed grossly unjust. Guy felt he鈥檇 very nearly solved this case himself, now that the facts were exposed. Always a step closer than anyone knew. And here he was feeling guilty about spending Reese鈥檚 half of the company money. Which seemed fair now.
No sense dwelling on the past though. There was another detective story in the Dixie Times Dispatch, a purely East Lanta mystery. The details somehow involved a buried clock. The DTD went on to liberally criticize Lanta鈥檚 celebrated Assistant Chief Detective, Inspector William 鈥楢pe鈥 Pagoda, for wasting time on a clock, considering the amount of real crime going on in Lanta, and also for throwing parts of his lunch at the press. Pagoda claimed to have unearthed a vast complex of deeply criminal motives. True, motives aren鈥檛 crimes. But when the actual crimes broke out, the motives might be relevant eventually. No imagination. That鈥檚 the problem with the news.
The Affair of the Two Phils
About seventy blocks from Poisson鈥檚 new office, in the dark of the moon, on an unlit side street seedier than Mexican ditchweed, an individual named Fil walked into the Greasy Gaboon, sat down at the counter, looked at the weekly special on the chalkboard, and sighed. He was the only customer. The Greasy Gaboon wasn鈥檛 known for its swell cuisine. If Fil had been smarter鈥 or funnier鈥 or blessed with charisma鈥 or had any positive qualities or even a random smear of general awareness, he鈥檇 have realized the weekly special never changed. That鈥檚 what made it special. But Fil was beyond those kinds of abstract things. What he was, was hungry. Hungry hungry. So he proceeded to spoon up the hash browns from a puddle of secret sauce, choking it down before it choked him back.
After Fil was full he asked for a re-Fil and pointed at himself and laughed for a sadly inappropriate amount of time. But Flona the night shift waitress had heard it all before, much of it from Fil. She just tipped the coffee pot over far enough to ooze another cup of industrial Joe into Fil鈥檚 open mug. As she did so, she dreamed of the beach road north of Sacramento. Because she was from another world鈥攖he Opposite Coast鈥攖he Land of 1,000 Reasons not to run away to Hot Lanta and work at the Greasy Gaboon. But despite all these reasons to not be there, Flona also had reasons why she was there. She even knew some of the reasons. A truly reasonable person like Flona never runs out of reasons how come this and that.
Meanwhile Fil finally stopped laughing at his own little joke and turned around on his stool to stare blankly around the diner. Work of a moment. The Greasy Gaboon was tiny鈥攐nly had three small tables and five small chairs. Fil wondered what happened to chair #6. I mean, five chairs, he thought, ain鈥檛 even a quartet!
On this particular night, as Fil Feelmore dreamed of more ways to count chairs and crack wise, fate decided to be done with him. Because unfortunately for Fil, he closely resembled his cousin Phil Philmore in looks, posture, and much more importantly where a slobbering bloodhound named Wubba was concerned, smell. Which is why at precisely 01:73 AM Eastern Swamp Time, a professional assassin opened the door of the Greasy Gaboon, politely leashed Wubba (a partly-trained tracking dog of sub-average skills) to the doorknob, and filled Fil full of lead. Which Fil thought was inexplicably sudden and uncalled-for, as the lights went out鈥
The Brink of the Precipice
鈥楢pe鈥 Pagoda sat in his obsession therapist鈥檚 waiting room for the third time this week. The Chief was really mad this time. But what was a simian supposed to do about a rival suitor for the girl of his dreams? Farla Buttafuco haunted his thoughts like a crocodile hanging out for buffalo at the water hole. He thought about Farla a lot. When he thought about Phil Philmore he didn鈥檛 enjoy that so much. Ape scratched his elbow and started leafing through a homemaker鈥檚 magazine that caught his eye. Banana pie. Banana pie sounded great and also photographed really well. The nice secretary, Mrs. Flumpkins, called his name. Her voice had a rough, low register that Ape found non-threatening. He showed his teeth by way of thanks and loped into Dr. Snodgrass鈥檚 office.
鈥淭hird time this week, Ape.鈥
Ape nodded and squatted in his usual corner of the room.
鈥淣ow really, Ape, you can sit in the chair if you want to.鈥
Ape shook his head and scratched his haunches, as if to demonstrate that he couldn鈥檛 scratch his haunches sitting in a chair.
鈥淥K, Ape, have it your way. The Chief says you lost control of yourself at work and threw things at the newspaper guys again. Can you tell me what you were feeling when you did that?鈥
Ape blew air through his nose.
鈥淣ow Ape, you don鈥檛 have to talk if you prefer not to, but we both know you speak English just fine. Was this about Ms. Buffalo again?鈥
鈥淏uttafuco. Her name is Farla Buttafuco,鈥 Ape said.
鈥淭hat鈥檚 right, Farla. Have you ever actually talked to Farla? Asked her out? A movie perhaps?鈥
鈥淎 movie? Damn it, man, the jungle ain鈥檛 no place to take a pretty girl.鈥
鈥淪ure, Ape, but you live in the City of Lanta. The docks are kind of like a jungle, but鈥︹
鈥淣o comment.鈥
鈥淎nd I鈥檒l just remind you again鈥攜ou are a human being, and worthy of love.鈥
Ha. Just what he would say. Dr. Snodgrass was in on it, of course. Ape turned around and showed the doctor his red butt.
This was a bit literal even for a psychotherapist. He preferred his infantile behavior to be more metaphoric. 鈥淎pe. This is what babies do. Pull your pants up.鈥
鈥淪ure, doc, sure, and I guess I鈥檓 not covered in fur either.鈥
鈥淵es, you鈥檙e a hairy guy. But it鈥檚 not fur.鈥
鈥淗ow鈥檇 this happen, anyway? Am I hallucinating? One minute I鈥檓 minding my own business in the jungle, peacefully watching the flamingos dip their beaks, and next thing I wake up in a police station in Lanta and I鈥檝e got a job? As Assistant Chief Detective? Can that really happen?鈥
鈥淟isten to yourself, Ape. Here you are, a respectable public employee wearing a badge and a firearm, third generation public service, half a dozen commendations, two purple hearts, a full-dress peaked hat with a brass eagle on it, union member in terrific standing, got a fabulous pension, countless vacation days, stupendous health coverage鈥︹
Ape knew he needed help with his obsessions, but he felt little respect for Dr.Snodgrass, who wasn鈥檛 helping much. Ape had a case to solve, complicated by the fact that Farla, the love of this period of his life, was one of the most likely suspects in a string of closely linked killings that had only just begun. A nasty little tangle guaranteed to include any number of murders eventually. Of course, under all the disingenuous folderol, money was the real motive. Which meant Ape might have to count numbers, or try to count, if he was going to puzzle this out. And here he was with his wits shattered. He needed a cure real bad, not Dr. Snodgrass rattling away like a pair of castanets. Ape slyly reached into the leather shoulder holster concealed under his sports jacket. 鈥淭ake that!鈥 he yelled, hurling a handful of putrid jackfruit across the room. First time he felt good all day.
A Missing Spirit Animal
The appropriate clients for Guy鈥檚 services as a Private Psychic Investigator showed up at once鈥攏ot horse rustlers or arsonists for a well-deserved change, but working stiffs in clumsy tweed cotton suits and bulky shoes, anxious to communicate with their husband, wife, mistress, minister, pool boy, or other significant relationship.
鈥淎ll that ectoplasm stuff is fake, basically just these strings you see me working,鈥 Guy told them. 鈥淵ou can鈥檛 talk from the Beyond. If you could, you wouldn鈥檛 need me. And no 鈥榤ake me guess鈥 nonsense. Let鈥檚 write what we want in a good long letter. Put in every detail you know and exactly what you鈥檇 like to hear back.鈥
After collecting the data and scheduling the return appointment, Guy wrote the answers from the Great Beyond in silver ink on purple paper. Mostly the answer was to stop worrying about dead people. He was comfortable with that advice. At the return appointment Pompilius, judiciously touched up with phosphorus, would carry the Letter From Beyond into the black-lit room in his mouth. Pompilius was hard to identify as a cat even in good light without phosphorous. It didn鈥檛 hurt that the letters from beyond were dryly scrawled in pathetic fake French. In fact nothing hurt, but it was small potatoes. At least Guy didn鈥檛 have to dust the stairs.
Then Shirley Serious came in with a real case.
鈥淗ere鈥檚 the deal. I have a Spirit Animal,鈥 Shirley said. 鈥淣ot sure if everybody has a Spirit Animal but one of my ancestors was an Indian about 600 years ago, so I still have one. And apparently I must have done something terrible, because my Spirit Animal has abandoned me. I feel totally unprotected. You can鈥檛 go through life as a person who used to have a Spirit Animal. Can you help with that sort of thing, Mr. Poisson?鈥
鈥淵es, but I prefair you call it Giii.鈥
鈥淚t鈥檚 not funny,鈥 Shirley said. 鈥淵ou can die from being abandoned by your Spirit Animal.鈥
鈥淚 sense your distress. There is a natural homogenesia pervading the Orgone. I must ask one thing. The unknown spirit animal鈥攈as it got a name it answers to?鈥
鈥淎nswers to? Why would it?鈥
鈥淎nd can anyone else see it? This unknown spirit animal.鈥
鈥淚 have no way of knowing that,鈥 Shirley replied.
鈥淭hose answers tell me, madame, that you are serious.鈥
鈥淭hat鈥檚 my name!鈥
鈥淎nd, may I ask, who was so kind as to refer you to me? There may be the discount鈥︹
鈥淚 saw the sign. I just live a few blocks away.鈥
鈥淵ou understand, l鈥檃nimal spirituel, it can be obstinate at times, but with ze proper bait鈥︹
鈥淢aybe I鈥檓 not explaining this very well. He hasn鈥檛 disappeared or anything, he鈥檚 guarding the wrong house now. He started guarding the house across the street.鈥
鈥淲hat kind of spirit animal is it?鈥
鈥淣o idea. Never seen another one like it.鈥
鈥淭he huge animal?鈥
鈥淣o. Well, yes. Actually, it can be different sizes. Generally you鈥檇 call it fairly large for a smaller animal. But as a large animal it would be on the smaller side. Before you go any further, it鈥檚 not a dog. I think it鈥檚 from another dimension. It appears on Mondays and Tuesdays. Late on Monday and early on Tuesday.鈥
鈥淭he astronomical timing does suggest the transdimensional traveler. But you understand, I cannot summon this spirit animal up and make it speak. The ectoplasm鈥攋ust strings. The haunting astral music鈥攋ust Debussy鈥檚 Nuages played backwards. The parlor tricks, merde sacre.鈥
鈥淚鈥檓 not an idiot either,鈥 Shirley said. 鈥淚 work at Police Precinct Number One. I don鈥檛 believe in fortune-telling and psychic stuff. I see more lies and deceit in a day than most people see in a year.鈥
鈥淭he not easily fooled. Life for a cop in the wharf district, she is rough, no?鈥
鈥淥h, I鈥檓 not a cop. I own the snack bar concession.鈥
鈥淭hen you are a wealthy woman!鈥
鈥淗a. Cops think the world owes them a living. It鈥檚 a constant struggle. I get 鈥檈m back though. Donuts can be stale when they need to be. Don鈥檛 get me wrong鈥攕ome of the detainees are just as bad. The guys in the cells eat an awful lot of swole on credit. Condiment packets ain鈥檛 really free, you know. I鈥檓 definitely interested in that discount you mentioned.鈥
The beautiful frightened client with money. The police, they cannot help. Here, finally, was a case for method, for reasoning. The unfaithful鈥攈ow often they are content just to cross the street! So disillusioning.
Guy knew the time and the place. The first step: determining if the truant spiritual beast was a solid object. By day he scouted the location. Shirley lived in a detached house with a front yard. She certainly couldn鈥檛 plead poverty. The front yard even had a bush he could very nearly conceal himself under.
On Monday night, Guy saw lots of things. The house across the street had many tenants. Their stretch of sidewalk was obstructed by bags of trash and garbage. A nice neighborhood; they had trash pickup, one of the most expensive private services. Most of the trash was in paper bags or cardboard boxes, but some folks on Shirley鈥檚 street had real trash cans. Shirley鈥檚 trash can was brand new. Factory-cast with a nice tight lid. Some would have said it was much too nice to put trash in. But the well-off think differently from the rest of us. Anyway, talk about luxury, a guy down the street had a trash can with wheels. He pushed it out to the sidewalk in his sock feet around eleven-thirty, like a show-off performing an errand he鈥檇 just barely remembered in time.
Guy was fine until it started raining. Not all detectives are set up for rain. His partner Reese, for instance, had a trench coat and a hat with a brim. Guy鈥檚 full evening dress, on the other hand, absorbed water rapidly, though not as rapidly as the velvet cape he鈥檇 thrown over himself. Southern weather, are you kidding me. He went home. No choice really. He promptly overslept. Late Tuesday morning he dashed back to the stakeout. All the trash was gone. The clip-clop of the trash wagon could still be heard two streets away. No sign of any spirit animal.
That鈥檚 what happens when you leave early and return late. Nothing to say whether Shirley鈥檚 spirit animal was solid, or only visible to Shirley. He鈥檇 have liked to ask Shirley about her new trash can, or if she previously used bags like most people, but your clients are not your friends. As a professional, you should stay the hell away from them. He had enough unsolved information already. And they wonder why detectives are so gloomy.
Almost a week later, it was dawn on Monday again, just as humid, but maybe not raining. Around 07:85, lurking behind the bush in Shirley鈥檚 front yard, Guy heard rustling, almost as if an animal was stirring. The garbage on the sidewalk threw long brown shadows under the watery sun. A disturbingly misshapen hairy beast emerged between the ripe and splitting sacks of trash across the street. Streaks of left-over phosphorus glowed in its fur.
鈥淧ompilius,鈥 Guy hissed.
Phil Philmore鈥檚 Fates
The Greasy Gaboon assassin鈥檚 failed play (if you call slaughtering Fil a failure鈥攐r a play, for that matter) told Phil Philmore all he needed to know. 鈥淵ou gotta hide me,鈥 he begged Farla Buttafuco, Ape Pagoda鈥檚 heart throb. The lovely buxom Farla was alarmed to hear it.
鈥淲hat about Flona?鈥 Farla asked. 鈥淚s Flona OK?鈥
鈥淔lona Flona nothing, they鈥檙e after me, you get it?鈥
鈥淚t鈥檚 a terrible risk,鈥 Farla said. 鈥淪omebody will have to bring you food. Probably me. Ape will see a gravy stain or something and figure it out.鈥
鈥淭hen to hell with food,鈥 Phil replied. 鈥淚鈥檒l live on drink.鈥
With that objection out of the way, Farla said OK. She had the perfect place, as Phil well knew, which was why he asked her in the first place. Thirty-five minutes later, Phil Philmore was locked in a wine cellar. Locked in from the outside, for plausibility. Half an hour later Phil was shit-faced drunk. This went on for days. To begin with, cadet oenophile Phil thought he could tough it out. Bottle after bottle of twenty-year-old vin d鈥檛erroir extraordinaire sloshed down his gullet. When he found the cask of Amontillado all the way in the back of the cellar, you couldn鈥檛 say it sobered him up, but it was an uncomfortable reminder of what drinking in the dark can lead to. Best to stay away from that corner. It was awful quiet in the wine cellar. And a touch damp. Cough cough.
For Phil, the line between reality and dreams began to fade. Indeed, his dreams were well lit, unlike the wine cellar. He dreamed of dry mornings, the kinda morning dry you get when you shove a soda cracker into a Southern Baptist t-shirt vendor鈥檚 open mouth at the yearly Easter Convention. It was that dry. But he鈥檇 earned it. Because Phil had finally lost his mind. A week or ten days in a sealed wine cellar will do that to you. One more bottle and he never would have recovered. But of the Two Phils, he was still the luckier one. Yes, luck, because he didn鈥檛 believe in religion.
Meanwhile, on the surface world, Phil鈥檚 disappearance was the long-awaited break Ape Pagoda needed in the Case of the Two Phils. All that remained now was to assemble the entire cast of suspects, scare the piss out of them, handcuff the guilty ones and drag them off to the cells to live on Shirley鈥檚 swole. Work of a moment. The reporters were all ready to photograph everyone at the big reveal. Ape was momentarily at the top of his intellectual form.
鈥溾o you went to a lot of trouble to make it look like Phil was dead but really he was hiding in the locked wine cellar THE WHOLE TIME, wasn鈥檛 he, Farla!鈥 said the Ape Detective.
鈥淪o sue me,鈥 Farla replied.
鈥淏ut you still haven鈥檛 explained the letter with the rose petals? And what about the dead bartender?鈥 asked Sharon O鈥橶hosit, the Irish belladonna whose lanky misbehavior set off the Case of the Two Phils to begin with.
鈥淎ha!鈥 said Ape. 鈥淗aven鈥檛 I?鈥 And he just stood there, staring Farla鈥檚 guests and the household staff down, as if daring anyone else to speak up.
Which they all did. 鈥淣o, no, I don鈥檛 think so, must have missed it, didn鈥檛 catch the big reveal, etc.鈥
鈥淥h. Well, no problem. You see, only Count Henry Cisco had the motive and the resources to bury the family clock and then dig it up again. A good alibi, to be sure, if it hadn鈥檛 been Daylight Swamp Time! Daylight Swamp Time鈥檚 metric!鈥
鈥淥h, Jeez, of course,鈥 they all said. 鈥淪o it was that obvious. Gosh, why didn鈥檛 I think of it.鈥
And there it was. The clock. The rose petals. The letter. Count Cisco, and the mud on his hand-tooled leather boots. Three dead cats. A deceased bartender with $8,700 in counterfeit New Confederate Money in his bar jacket. Even Fil鈥檚 pointless manslaughter at the Greasy Gaboon. It all added up to a life sentence for Count Henry Cisco and his wife, the Countess of Henry Cisco. Everything fitted together perfect, like a Tetris screen. Farla was stunned, relieved, and also seriously turned on鈥 already couldn鈥檛 keep her hands off herself鈥 yep, it was gonna be a good night for Ape, a great night in fact, or Ape would be the first person to want to know why not.
鈥淪hould we let Phil out of the wine cellar?鈥 said Sharon thinly. 鈥淭ell him what happened? Faith, he鈥檒l be after having no idea.鈥
鈥淵eah. Ook! I mean, yeah,鈥 Ape said.
Phil, a pale green louche of himself, crawled hesitantly out of the wine cellar. 鈥淎h? Ah?鈥 he said. It was a lot for him to take in. Cousin Fil鈥攄ead. The Greasy Gaboon鈥攂urned to the stumps. Wubba, the fatal bloodhound鈥攂linded by the headlights on Peachtree Avenue, stepped in front of a steam tractor, crushed. The anonymous assassin who iced Fil鈥攗npaid, bitter, badly missing his dog, a threat no more. Count and Countess Henry Cisco鈥攄estined for long prison sentences. And Flona the Night-Shift Waitress was free now, free to walk off down the street and fulfill her destiny if that was what she wanted to do. My God, Phil鈥檚 good luck was terrifying. On the down side, Frenchie LaRue had not been pleased at the Annual Police Stockholders鈥 Meeting about the fruit hurling at the press conference.
Frogpaws Harry Intervenes
Unfortunately for several people, the Case of the Two Phils was not quite over. As darkness crept in, or in Phil鈥檚 case rose hauntingly from the wine cellar, Ape prepared to claim as his victory lap the female for whom he drooled and schemed, his long awaited crack at Farla. Farla was game too, but suddenly the fatal appendage cashed out. After a lot of fumbling around and howling, Ape knuckled back to Precinct Number One at a handsome trot, sans pants, foaming at the chops with disappointment. Straight through the door, past Sergeant Jerry at the front desk, through the Whatever Room where the cops hung around when they were at work (empty now, not a soul in the place at this time of night) and into his own office. Ape鈥檚 office at the back of the precinct was not really completely dark, but it wasn鈥檛 well lit. Ape Pagoda was exrtremely well lit, but that wasn鈥檛 important right now.
The important part, Ape and Farla both would have said, was Ape completely missing out on the best sex of his life, hours of fabulous sex he didn鈥檛 have. Now Ape was behind his desk on his hands and knees, looking for a revolver. 鈥淭wo can play at that game,鈥 Ape muttered to himself in a merry Vincent van Gogh mood. But just as he found the revolver and flipped the safety catch off, Ape鈥檚 ruined orgie a deux was overshadowed by a second assassin.
Frogpaws Harry was only now getting around to the awfully clever scheme he鈥檇 worked out: simple lurking. Precinct security was notoriously weak. Just seconds after Ape shot past, Frogpaws鈥 lurking skills paid off. He dashed in behind Ape and easily snatched the astonished Sergeant Jerry off the front desk. Revolver in hand, Ape peeked up to see Frogpaws holding a big serrated knife to Sergeant Jerry鈥檚 throat. Jerry looked scared. Jerry hated frogs, hated and feared them. It was mutual. But frog-hate, and the deep well of prehistoric consciousness that spawns it, wasn鈥檛 important right now. Neither was the humidity. Moist, but not important. A hot, semi-lit evening. Ape struggled to pay full attention to the crisis at hand. When you鈥檙e this drunk, it pays to be cautious. Wait鈥 had anyone paid him? Was he cautious? And where were his pants?
Frogpaws was talking. 鈥淪mart move snapping off the lights, Ape, but I know you鈥檙e in here. I know you are, 鈥榗ause I got your pants. Come out, or Officer Jerry here gets it. And then us鈥檔 all are gonna take a ride to the wharf鈥攔eal quiet-like. Cochise?鈥
Ape didn鈥檛 remember taking off his pants, but he didn鈥檛 remember a lot of things. Like his mother鈥檚 birthday or which end was up or what 鈥渜uagmire鈥 meant. But he did remember one thing鈥 nope. Forgot that too. Man, was it moist in his office! So moist his trigger finger slipped and the revolver went off.
Frogpaws screamed as the floor opened under his feet and he fell, or plunged, fifty feet or so into the second basement. Under other circumstances he might have survived but a police station has to store its bear trap arsenal somewhere. The sound of dozens of bear traps snapping shut with meaty thuds was too much for poor Sergeant Jerry, who threw up on the rug. As if things weren鈥檛 moist enough.
鈥淐ase closed,鈥 Ape said, a remark as literal as it was needless.
The Naked City
It was a new day. Detective Ape Pagoda couldn鈥檛 believe it. His pants were lost again. Baskets of Frogpaws Harry were still being passed up the narrow steps from the second basement, at the coroner鈥檚 request. All the precinct personnel came around to look at the mess. Fortunately Shirley Serious had spare pants at the snack bar. 鈥淲hy so down in the dumps, Ape?鈥 asked Shirley. 鈥淣obody鈥檚 gonna miss Frogpaws. You could shoot him all you want. Probably get another medal.鈥
鈥淚t鈥檚 not that. The doctor says I鈥檝e got Ed. Who鈥檚 Ed? Mr. Ed? I hate horses.鈥 Ape threw a handful of nuts against the wall and knuckled anxiously back and forth and up and down.
鈥淢aybe it was a capital D. ED. Maybe he meant your dick don鈥檛 work.鈥
鈥淥K, who鈥檚 Dick? One of Ed鈥檚 friends? I hope Ed鈥檚 happy. What I need right now is a replacement for that so-called psychiatrist Snodgrass. The man鈥檚 a Freudian. He鈥檚 got no idea how to lift a curse. I need a psychic.鈥 Ape dropped to the floor and curled into a ball, the better to show off his rump. He liked Shirley.
鈥淕o see Guy Poisson, Homme des Ombres. He reunited me with my astral familiar!鈥
鈥淒amn, that does sound pretty accomplished. Where is he?鈥
鈥淐an鈥檛 miss it, corner of Broad and Mammal.鈥
Ape was tired after suffering the worst disappointment of his life and then killing Frogpaws, but this was an emergency. Soon Guy woke to a frightful banging on his door. Ape popped the lock and broke in before Guy could finish dressing.
鈥淪hirley tells me you solve witchcraft cases,鈥 Ape said. 鈥淪he told me you reunited her with her missing spirit animal.鈥
鈥淚t was not missing, nor had it ceased to be Shirley鈥檚 guardian on the Plane Astral. Please, come in. As I told the delightful Shirley, when she bought the elite garbage can with the lid most fancy, her spirit animal was forced to appear across the street. Between you and me, it was all about leftovers. But now Pompilius lives at her home and there will be no more trouble.鈥
鈥淪hirley also tells me I鈥檓 the Assistant Chief Detective of the Lanta Police Department. But plainly I鈥檓 a monkey of some kind living in the jungle. It doesn鈥檛 add up.鈥 Ape flicked a fly off the windowpane with his new trousers, which were already crumpled. 鈥淚 will come back and shit all over this room if you tell anybody I was here,鈥 he said disconsolately.
鈥淚 beg you not to,鈥 Guy said.
鈥淭hen you better come up with something.鈥
鈥淭here is always tension in the partnership between the official detective of high local standing and the world-famous private investigator, between the mere professional and the genius amateur. My m茅thode psychique is secret. I am not to be seen. I tell no one anything.鈥
鈥淧erfect. Oook!鈥
鈥淐alm yourself. We can approach your problem by deduction.鈥
鈥淏ut that will drive me crazy!鈥
鈥淚t鈥檚 a risk we must take.鈥
鈥淥碍.鈥
鈥淢aybe it is induction. I am never sure.鈥
Ape curled his lips back to show that it was all the same to him.
鈥淟et us explore the extent of this curse a witch has placed on you. You think this is the jungle, no?鈥
鈥淥bviously,鈥 said Ape.
鈥淏ut the jungle has vines and trees. Lanta has cement and asphalt. When you look out this window, what do you see?鈥
鈥淚 see a brick wall.鈥
鈥淪o the asphalt jungle is the metaphor. The naked city. It has a million stories, n鈥檈st pas?鈥
鈥淗ow does that help?鈥
鈥淲e are leading you back to reality. You think you are the simian, no? Then how is it you have solved the great case, the Mystery of the Two Phils, which has exercised the public imagination all over town for weeks?鈥
鈥淚s this going to cost a lot?鈥
鈥淎 case of this complexity鈥擨 can offer the discount鈥攕till鈥︹
鈥淓xcuse me a minute,鈥 Ape said, bounding out the door and down the stairs by way of the bannisters.
That, thought Guy, is the end of that. Some people are shy about money. Mention cash and they run away. He never expected to see Ape again. Guy consoled himself with a salami sandwich鈥攕adly, without the mustard, business wasn鈥檛 that good鈥攂ut by the time he finished wolfing his tainted lunch, Ape Pagoda came back after all.
鈥淛ust remembered I had a fine to collect,鈥 Ape said, throwing a fat wad of Dixie rag paper on the s茅ance table. 鈥淲ill this cover your walking-around money?鈥
鈥Merde de dieu,鈥 Guy expostulated grievously. 鈥淲hat happened to your eye?鈥
鈥淲alked into a door.鈥
鈥淵ou鈥檙e going to have quite a shiner tomorrow.鈥
鈥淪mall price to pay if you can turn me back into a human.鈥
鈥Oui. But there is the possibility you have been a human the whole time.鈥
鈥淭hen how do you explain this?鈥 Ape said, ripping off his shirt.
鈥Incroyable,鈥 Guy said. 鈥淐ould I ask you to turn around? The back too. Fantastique.鈥
鈥淭old you so.鈥
鈥淏ut this is not fur. This is human hair, though it has the quality, how you say in English, pubic. Except it is all over. This popsicle stick, it has importance for you?鈥
鈥淚 wondered where that went.鈥
鈥淢ay I remove it? I find it disturbing.鈥
鈥淪ure. Ouch.鈥
鈥淎lso, no tail. A monkey, it has the tail.鈥
鈥淚 get this all the time. I tried psychotherapy. It鈥檚 not helpful.鈥
鈥淲e have accepted that the jungle is a figurative jungle only.鈥
鈥淭he asphalt jungle. Yeah, I like that.鈥
鈥淭hen while I examine the structure of this curse, you can be the figurative simian only.鈥
鈥淭he asphalt simian? But that doesn鈥檛 make any sense, doctor.鈥
鈥淧lease, monsieur. I must have your cooperation to work.鈥
Rinascimento del Pomodoro
Guy did not spend a great deal of time examining the structure of Ape鈥檚 curse, since he didn鈥檛 believe in witchcraft. Instead he undertook a program of social rehabilitation for Ape, starting with a poetry reading in a coffeehouse near the university. Things began to go bad during a spirited rendition of 鈥淗owl鈥 and the pants came off, but fortunately the next poem was Wordsworth鈥檚 鈥淧relude鈥 and Ape was quite calm again by Book 6 (鈥淐ambridge and the Alps鈥). The Alps beat Cambridge by quite a lot, 15,781 to 20. Still the poetry reading wasn鈥檛 a total success. Guy failed to interest a shy but winsome blonde who was reading Whitman into a date of any kind, and Ape only avoided arrest by his unlimited conditional immunity as Assistant Chief Detective. Even so, the reading broke up with a lot of ill will on some sides.
The next excursion, to the Dixie Museum of Art, went promisingly until Ape saw the Jackson Pollacks. A shocking setback. Guy fled, leaving Ape to wreck the place. But Guy was undeterred. The next night he dragged Ape to Symphony Hall.
鈥淏onk鈥檚 Variations on Shoe Man,鈥 Ape read aloud, his clawlike index nail tracing the words on the program. 鈥淚 know who Bonk is but what鈥檚 this Shoe Man?鈥
鈥淢erely one of the most celebrated of the Hobo Musicians of ancient times. Back in the 19th and 20th centuries the famous Hobo Musicians wandered from place to place renting pianos and charging admission. It was part of pre-television world culture.鈥
鈥淥h,鈥 Ape said. 鈥淧retty smart racket.鈥
The music was OK for Bonk, but the metal struts in the sides of the narrow seat cut into Guy鈥檚 thighs until tears involuntarily streamed down his face. The seat back was designed to slowly crush the nerves under his shoulder blades until his arms went numb. The lumpy cushion cut off all circulation to his legs while compressing his bladder until he thought he might explode. Guy grimaced ferociously, determined not to pass out in agony, but despite the distractions he eventually noticed Ape鈥檚 legs were bare once more.
鈥淗ow鈥檇 you get 鈥榚m off?鈥 he asked.
鈥淭hey fell off by themselves.鈥 Ape still had his plaid sports jacket and luau tie on though, but the front of his shirt was in rags.
鈥淒id you ever own underwear?鈥 Guy asked. But at least Ape wasn鈥檛 snapping his empty trouser legs at the other ticket-holders, as he so often did. The trousers were neatly folded on the armrest. Real progress.
鈥淭his music is totally disorganized,鈥 Ape said. 鈥淗alf the orchestra鈥檚 just sitting there most of the time. And why does that miserable fiddle player wait for everybody else to stop? He never catches up anyway. He doesn鈥檛 even look like he鈥檚 enjoying himself. They should just let him go home where he belongs.鈥
鈥淲hen to play and when to not play is written in musical notation on the music sheets in front of them.鈥
鈥淵ou mean they don鈥檛 all have the same instructions? That鈥檚 chaos! Well, thank God it鈥檚 over. What鈥檚 coming up next?鈥
鈥淧otemkin鈥檚 Fourth Piano Quartet.鈥
The orchestra made room as the piano-handlers wheeled in four massive grand pianos. With great solemnity, the bassoonist adjusted her tuxedo and prepared for the bassoon interludes. If I could only wince my knees out one more inch I might avoid an embolism, thought Guy. But his optimism was in vain. Ape, however, seemed entranced into a strangely civilized mood by the awful din. He even helped Guy to his numbed feet when the concert ended. 鈥淚 gotta get outta here,鈥 Ape said.
鈥淣ow I want you to notice,鈥 Guy replied as he hobbled up the aisle on Ape鈥檚 arm, 鈥渆verybody in this place knows you鈥檙e not supposed to walk around in public with no pants. But nobody鈥檚 making a big deal about it. Everybody鈥檚 had that dream. No pants in public. So they just pretend it鈥檚 not happening.鈥
鈥淵eah, they just assume I鈥檓 dreaming. Hey, wait a minute. So when they see somebody breaking an important social convention, they ignore it?鈥
鈥淓xactly. It preserves the decorum of the occasion. It鈥檚 the civilized thing.鈥
鈥淵eah. I kind of get what you mean. Civilized. By police procedure I ought to choke myself to death for public nudity while you beat me with a club, but maybe it鈥檚 something to consider though.鈥
Guy already knew he鈥檇 started Ape鈥檚 social rehabilitation on too high a plane. The next excursion was a hot dog stand, where a belching Ape ate five hot dogs standing up and then wiped the excess mustard, ketchup and chili sauce into the hair on his chest. But he kept his pants on. Guy praised him fulsomely and Ape beamed with gratification.
It was time to take the great Ape Detective to a movie. Not a stupid movie, a decent famous movie with some mental challenges to it but not enough mental challenges to obscure the story. A historical romance seemed the perfect choice. Fortunately the art house near the college was showing Rinascimento del Pomodoro, directed by the great Bertolli. Ape was entirely tractable and settled down in the movie theater with his popcorn and soda, which he ate and drank in a straightfoward manner free of shenanigans or tomfoolery. Guy, a bit on edge, divided his attention between Ape and the movie, and came away with a peripheral impression of a rocky village high in the Tuscan hills, and a cascade of agricultural terraces thronged with huge vining plants. There were sensuous closeups of budding green tomatoes. Ape still had his tasteless checkered sports coat on, his tie on, his shirt was on, his pants were on his legs, even his shoes were still on his feet. Ape seemed fascinated by Bertolli鈥檚 lush Italian imagery. 鈥淭he critics say this is probably the best imaginary Hollywood Tuscan English dialect in Bertolli鈥檚 entire opus,鈥 Guy whispered. 鈥淪hut up,鈥 Ape replied. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 Michelangelo!鈥 On the screen, in an extended flashback, Michelangelo was explaining art to the hero of the film, a strikingly handsome young man named Luigi.
鈥淎rt, thatta all she is,鈥 Michelangelo said. 鈥淵ou can hava da art withouta da world, but you no canna hava da world withouta da art. Pound, he get confused by Mussolini, they gotta lock him up, nobody calla dat art no more. But Harpo, he easy tella the difference between right and wrong only it don鈥檛 matter. So he eata da phone. You unnerstand, eata da phone?鈥 鈥淭he phone, she no tasta good.鈥 鈥Basta! You gotta future, kid. You get to Florence, you look this guy up,鈥 Michelangelo said, handing Luigi a business card with the name 鈥楲orenzo de Medici鈥 engraved in gold ink. 鈥淥h, dese guys,鈥 Luigi said. 鈥Buona fortuna, amico mio,鈥 said Michelangelo.
Obviously Michelangelo got it, but nobody else did. The vines grew steadily, draping themselves down the terraces, and the residents of the village laughed. 鈥淟uigi, thatta Spanish fruit! Them Borgias no gotta da culture. You gonna be sorry.鈥
鈥淏ut I gotta feeling,鈥 Luigi said.
鈥淵ou a sad case, Luigi,鈥 they answered, and wandered off. But the slight form of old Dr. Piste, the village alchemist, concealed behind his bird-headed plague mask, seemed always to be lurking in the background, paying the most attention of all.
Luigi couldn鈥檛 get a date with a girl to save his life, despite his flaming good looks, because of the tomatoes. It bothered him a lot, especially late at night. And his Papa wanted him to make violins instead.
鈥淏ut Papa, I despisa da violins! A damn violin, I getta my hands on one, I put it inna da fire.鈥
鈥淥 Luigi, cretino! Now I gotta tella da priest.鈥
There was a tremendous amount of stress in that family. Luigi鈥檚 mother would lean out of the second story window groaning, 鈥淥h, whatta we gonna do, my son, he sfigato,鈥 as she hung out the laundry on the village wall. The tension couldn鈥檛 last, though. The golden sunlight poured down like treacle over the honey-colored rock, and all the tomatoes turned white, then pink, and finally into orbs of the deepest scarlet coral.
鈥淟uigi, what I tella you?鈥 said his Papa. 鈥淎lla dese plants, they determinant! They alla bloom at once, they all gonna fruit atta same time. You gotta grow da indeterminant varieties. And then it still wrong. Whatta you gonna do now? I think I losa my mind about this.鈥
It was the climax of the movie, Luigi鈥檚 dark night of the soul. Tragically, all of these unheard-of mysterious Spanish fruits were going dead ripe simultaneously, hundreds and hundreds of pounds of them. The long, slow strains of an ominous cello moaned in the background as Luigi, his desperate face lit only by a single candle in the umber darkness of his monkish cubicle, struggled all night with the most fateful decision of his life.
The next morning he went into the tomato terraces carrying a boat oar.
鈥淟uigi, you no canna maka da sauce from tomatoes!鈥 his Papa screamed. 鈥淭hey putta you in the asylum for sure!鈥
By this point the entire village was terrified of Luigi, obvious madman that he was, and now armed with a boat oar. Guy could barely tear his eyes off the screen. Ape Pagoda, enraptured by the drama, was still fully dressed, his hands gripping the armrests of his seat.
鈥淭ella me you no adda da garlic鈥擮 Luigi, you maka it worse!鈥
Old Padre Pio, the village priest, had already called the Inquisition鈥攏o choice really.
鈥淚 feel like I ought to apologize for even being here,鈥 said a patron of the filmic arts in the row behind Guy and Ape. Damn, thought Guy, are there different realities? Are the critics even watching the same film? The files of black-robed inquisitors in their pointy hoods were suddenly pushed aside by the bird-headed plague mask of Dr. Piste. 鈥Un minuto,鈥 Dr. Piste said. 鈥淵ou got alla dis completely backward. This da besta thing ever happen around here.鈥
Luigi was stirring a huge cauldron of mashed tomatoes, greatly boiled down. By no means did the mess smell poisonous. It smelled rather good.
鈥淣ow I put it onna dese Chinese noodles,鈥 Luigi said, 鈥渁nd I eata it, lika so.鈥
A shock wave of horror palpably ran through the crowd, villagers, inquisitors, relatives, all of them. Only Dr. Piste seemed unmoved.
鈥淒amn good,鈥 Luigi said.
鈥淲e live in the rinacimento,鈥 explained Dr. Piste, 鈥渢hough not everybody acta like they know it alla da time. You gotta open you minds to the learning of the past and the discoveries of the future, and reclaima da classical values of Roman and Greek civilization.鈥
鈥淲ell OK, I gonna try it,鈥 said Luigi鈥檚 Papa. 鈥淚f it killa me, I deserve it.鈥
鈥淢e too. It smella OK,鈥 said the Grand Inquisitor, who was not such a bad fellow in private life. 鈥淢aybe da Church, she can open her mind too, just a little bit.鈥
鈥淒r. Piste, how come you know so much about this new fruit, when you so old?鈥
Dr. Piste pulled off her plague mask, revealing the supple young face of Julietta Piste, the real Dr. Piste鈥檚 daughter. 鈥淢y father鈥檚 been dead for years,鈥 she said. 鈥淏ut he taught me everything.鈥
A sudden fiery look flashed between Luigi and Julietta. 鈥淢aybe not everything,鈥 Luigi said.
Tears were streaming down Ape鈥檚 face. 鈥淭his is the best movie in the world,鈥 Ape said. 鈥淒r. Poisson. I鈥檓 human again. You did it!鈥
The Trial of Ape Pagoda
The murder of the famous Lanta Nuisance troubled a very tiny number of people, divided into categories of glad, kind of a shame, and 鈥淚 can see both sides.鈥 For the overwhelming majority of the population, it meant nothing. The degree of official concern was below the measurement threshold. Should have been the end of it, but murder is murder even in Hamlet, not to mention Lanta. Anyway, months and months after what some called an arguably benevolent side-alley mob execution, newly promoted Chief Detective Inspector Ape Pagoda whimsically decided to solve the Case of the Murdered Nuisance.
Ape was an indiscriminate sort of detective, unconsciously analyzing the physical effects of crime, motivated solely by an advanced sense of primate curiosity. He only needed a few unguarded hours to get himself into serious trouble. His colleagues, alarmed, badly wanted to dissuade him from this seamy investigation but none of them knew what 鈥榙issuade鈥 meant.
Maybe some killings shouldn鈥檛 be poked at. The case rapidly evolved labyrinthine complexities worthy of a better crime. Some said the governor was involved. Hints became allegations. One thing led to another. Before long, Ape Pagoda found himself trapped on top of an abandoned lighthouse in broad daylight, a hundred and sixty feet off the ground, sweating with embarrassment. On the staircase landing below, Needles Amphibole suggested rushing up and knifing Ape on the spot. 鈥淗e dropped his heater. He鈥檚 unarmed,鈥 Needles pointed out.
鈥淚f that鈥檚 the play, let鈥檚 just throw this grenade up. Hell, throw two grenades up,鈥 replied Bam Washington.
鈥淚 hate following orders. I鈥檓 gonna start my own gang soon,鈥 said Shrimp McNit, the kind of guy everybody else edges away from unconsciously.
Between them, these three thugs were packing about ten pounds of weapons of various kinds, none home-made. They weren鈥檛 innocent of anything.
鈥淗ow the hell did this happen?鈥 Ape murmured to himself, no longer able to justify the last several decisions he had made. The tide-swept dunes around the old lighthouse were broken only by a single sandy jeep track, with a single jeep, a fancy one, approaching in the distance. It looked like the end for Ape Pagoda.
鈥淥h shit, it鈥檚 Red and Tony,鈥 Rick the Voice yelled up the inverted megaphone of the old brick lighthouse.
Everybody froze.
鈥淟emme jump this stiletto into Ape,鈥 Needles begged.
鈥淲e鈥檒l never get rid of him if we don鈥檛 do it now,鈥 added Shrimp. 鈥淎pe ain鈥檛 stupid.鈥
鈥淭hrow the first grenade into the far end of the room, see. Ape goes after it of course. Have the pin on the second grenade already pulled, toss it in behind him, it goes off at once, knocks him flat on his face full of splinters, and then the other one blows his fool head off. I guarantee it.鈥
鈥淵ou鈥檒l never get me with that old gag,鈥 Ape shouted down the steps.
鈥淚 just don鈥檛 wanna end up in some situation where he gets away,鈥 Shrimp muttered. 鈥淗e knows who we are.鈥
That was certainly true. Ape was listening to them upstairs, grinding his teeth in the last stages of exasperation. He鈥檇 have cheerfully wrung all their necks, but that was a mug鈥檚 play. Outside, under the cloudless sky, the long Atlantic rollers crashed dramatically on Dead Man鈥檚 Beach鈥攁nd maybe the name was no coincidence.
Nothing happened. The jeep arrived. Two more people came up the steps, one a woman, the other male. The footsteps never slowed. Both these people, Valerian 鈥楥rimson鈥 Batt, capo di capos of the Georgia Coast, and the man too proud to be her lieutenant, freelance Tony Bologna, a.k.a. the Rumanian Chopper, were physically fit and could easily walk straight up an abandoned lighthouse. Tony鈥檚 antique Thompson submachine gun was in perfect working order, the drum loaded with fifty .45-caliber slugs, which the chopper would empty in about two seconds. And a second drum under his armpit just in case.
鈥淪o Tony gets to do it,鈥 Needles Amphibole said peevishly.
鈥淪tand aside little man,鈥 Tony replied.
鈥淗e gets a trial first,鈥 replied Valerian Batt. 鈥淲e do things the legal way.鈥
A thoroughly decayed dragon fruit flew down the stairs and splattered on the wall. 鈥淭ake that!鈥 shouted Ape, though his usual bravado sounded a bit strained.
A long pause followed.
鈥淗ey Red鈥︹ Tony said.
鈥淎 trial?鈥 asked Needles. 鈥淚 hate trials.鈥
鈥淭hen you can be the prosecutor, Needles. Keep it short and direct.鈥
鈥淥K. The defendant is guilty of being Ape Pagoda. We should all kill him.鈥
鈥淔air enough,鈥 Batt said. 鈥淧retty good argument. Simple. Solid. Not gonna be easy to crack. And for the defense?鈥
Silence ensued.
鈥淥h come on. There has to be a defense. How about you, Rick?鈥
鈥淥h hell no,鈥 Rick the Voice yelled up the stairwell. 鈥淚鈥檓 on the jury.鈥
鈥淏补尘?鈥
鈥淚鈥檓 the witness.鈥
鈥沦丑谤颈尘辫?鈥
鈥淒oes his defense have to be true?鈥
鈥淣辞.鈥
鈥淭hen count me out. I don鈥檛 wanna imply like I鈥檓 a snob or better than anybody else or anything, but I鈥檓 too proud to lie.鈥
鈥淩eal vague, Shrimp.鈥
鈥淭丑补苍办蝉.鈥
鈥淭hen I鈥檒l be the defense,鈥 said Tony. 鈥淔irst, Ape鈥檚 job is solving crimes, a completely different racket from the cops. He鈥檚 the last person on earth who would use threats and violence to enforce the legislature鈥檚 authoritarian social norms. It wouldn鈥檛 even occur to him. So he鈥檚 innocent in that respect, regardless of any grudges we probably have. Second, he ain鈥檛 really got nothin鈥 on us anyway. All our clients are respectable businessmen.鈥
鈥淭hen I gotta interrupt,鈥 said Needles for the Prosecution. 鈥淟ife in Lanta was easy going. All of a sudden it鈥檚 not. And get this鈥攂ecause somebody iced the Nuisance?鈥
鈥淚n Ape鈥檚 defense, what happened to the Nuisance鈥擨 don鈥檛 say it鈥檚 right or not鈥攂ut all Ape鈥檚 really guilty of is too much curiosity.鈥
鈥淭he Nuisance had his trial. I鈥檒l decide if that鈥檚 relevant or not,鈥 said Batt.
鈥淣ow the defense calls Bam as the witness,鈥 Tony said. 鈥淏am, would you say Ape was much of a businessman?鈥
鈥淗im?鈥 Bam said. 鈥淎pe鈥檚 paychecks end up in the trash. He can鈥檛 write his own name. He has to heist money on the sidewalk like Needles used to do.鈥
鈥淚 was just a kid then,鈥 Needles replied defensively.
鈥淭hat鈥檚 not relevant either,鈥 Valerian said. 鈥淥K, I think these cases have been presented. Everybody gets two marbles, one black, one white. Voice, you collect 鈥榚m and bring 鈥榚m up.鈥
鈥淒o you get a vote too?鈥 asked Tony.
鈥淥f course. They鈥檙e my marbles.鈥
The process took several minutes. All the marbles were white.
鈥淣eedles, did you turn in a white marble?鈥
鈥榊eah, Tony was pretty convincing.鈥
鈥淭辞苍测?鈥
鈥淚 was looking forward to killing Ape a lot, but since I鈥檓 his defense lawyer it wouldn鈥檛 be right.鈥
鈥凌颈肠办?鈥
鈥淚鈥檓 just on the jury. I don鈥檛 gotta have an excuse.鈥
鈥淏补尘?鈥
鈥淚 was the defense witness.鈥
鈥淟eaves you, Shrimp.鈥
鈥淲as I gonna vote different from everybody else?鈥
鈥淗ow about you, Red?鈥 Tony asked.
鈥淢y motives are my own,鈥 Valerian Batt answered. 鈥淥K, I鈥檒l pass sentence now. Ape is hereby sentenced to walk his baggy, bow-legged ass home on foot, because he ain鈥檛 got car fare.鈥
鈥淵ep,鈥 Tony added. 鈥淗e can鈥檛 afford a stick of gum.鈥
鈥淏ut Needles got one thing right,鈥 said Valerian Batt, capo di capos.
鈥淭丑补苍办蝉.鈥
鈥淒on鈥檛 get a swelled head. This dystopian crap hole would blow up if it wasn鈥檛 for us. I know you鈥檙e listening, Ape, and you know the deal. We ignore the cops and you guys do whatever you want outta my sight. But our integrity is important. You gotta keep your part of the bargain. It鈥檚 the social foundations of a stable situation. That clear, Ape?鈥
鈥淚f you mean full of horse shit, yeah, stable,鈥 Ape yelled back.
鈥淚t鈥檚 a system. So you mugs, stop looking like somebody stole your lollipop. Precinct One needs to be reminded to behave. Tony鈥檚 in charge of that, Shrimp drives and Bam handles the dynamite.鈥
鈥淲hadda I get out of that?鈥 whined Needles. 鈥淚鈥檓 a knife man.鈥
鈥淎nd we love you for it. Here鈥檚 two names in suburban West Lanta who forgot their part of the bargain too. Put 鈥榚m on a tombstone for me.鈥
鈥淲ow! Thanks boss!鈥 Needles exclaimed.
The unsuspecting names in West Lanta never saw it coming. Meanwhile the police tried to call the structural damage to Precinct One from Bam鈥檚 dynamite attack a public emergency of some kind, but the public wasn鈥檛 buying it. The balance of life was restored in Lanta, and the wily Ape Pagoda survived again, though all the windows had been blown out of his office by the time he got back to it. The unsolved riddle of who killed the Nuisance was always a sore point with him afterwards. He seldom spoke of it, but he got to keep his ass as a souvenir and from time to time he鈥檇 take it out and look at it, wondering could it have been played different.

Gary Mawyer is a retired editor and author who lives outside Charlottesville, Virginia. His books and blogs are available at his website, and other writing can be found in VV and .

Edward G. Mawyer, UVa Class of ’97, lives in Waynesboro and is a familiar face in every courthouse in Central Virginia.

Daniel Mawyer lives in Honolulu and teaches at Damien Memorial School. He gave up his career as an independent musician to be an artist.








