25 BUDDY VISTS THE AIRPORT
We shut 'em up and then we shut 'em down.
— Bruce Springsteen
One night some ten days later, as cardboard turkeys and construction-paper
cornucopias were beginning to appear in grammar school windows, a blue
Camaro, so radically jacked in the back that its nose seemed almost to scrape
the road, slid into the long-term parking lane at the airport.
Sandy Galton looked out from his glass booth nervously. From the driver's
side of the Ford the happy smiling face of Buddy Repperton tilted up toward
him. Buddy's face was scrubbed with a week-old beard and his eyes held a
maniacal glitter that was more cocaine than Thanksgiving cheer—he and the
boys had scored a pretty good gram that evening. All in all, Buddy looked
quite a bit like a depraved Clint Eastwood.
"How are they hanging, Sandy?" Buddy asked.
Dutiful laughter from the Camaro greeted this sally. Don Vandenberg,
Moochie Welch, and Richie Trelawney were with Buddy, and between the
gram of coke and the six bottles of Texas Driver Buddy had procured for the
occasion, they were feeling pretty much reet and compleet. They had come to
do a little dirty boogie on Arnie Cunningham's Plymouth.
"Listen, if you guys get caught, I'm gonna lose my job," Sandy said nervously.
He was the only one cold sober, and be was regretting ever having mentioned
that Cunningham was parking his heap here. The thought that he might go to
jail as well had fortunately not occurred to him.
"If you or any of your Mission Imfuckingpossible force are caught, the
Secretary will disavow you ever fuckin lived," Moochie said from the back
seat, and there was more laughter.
Sandy looked around for other cars—witnesses—but there were no planes
due for more than an hour and the parking lot was as deserted as the
mountains of the moon. The weather had turned very cold, and a wind as
keen as a fresh razor-blade whined across the runways and taxi-ways and
hooted miserably between the ranks of empty cars. Above and to his left, the
Apco sign banged restlessly back and forth.
"You can laugh, you retard," Sandy said. "I never saw you, that's all. If you
get caught, I'll say I was takin a crap."
"Jesus, what a baby," Buddy said. He looked sorrowful. "I never thought you
were such a baby, Sandy. Honest."
"Arf! Arf!" Richie barked, and there was more laughter. "Roll over and play
dead for Daddy Warbucks, Sandy!"
Sandy flushed. "I don't care," he said. "Just be careful."
"We will, man," Buddy said sincerely. He had saved back a seventh bottle of
Texas Driver and a pretty decent toot of nose-candy. Now he handed both up
to Sandy. "Here. Enjoy yourself."
Sandy grinned in spite of himself. "Okay," he said, and added, just so they'd
know he was no sad sack: "Do a good job."
Buddy's smile hardened, became metallic. The light went out of his eyes; they
became dull and dead and frightening. "Oh, we will," he said. "We will."
The Camaro drifted into the parking lot. For a while Sandy could follow its
progress toward the back by the moving tail-lights, and then Buddy doused
them. The sound of the motor, burbling through twin glasspack mufflers, came
back for a few moments on the wind, and then that sound was gone, too.
Sandy dumped the coke out on the counter by his portable TV and tooted it
with a rolled-up dollar bill. Then he got into the Texas Driver. He knew that
being discovered drunk on the job would also get him canned, but he didn't
much care. Being drunk was better than being cat-jumpy and always staring
around for one of the two gray Airport Security cars.
The wind was blowing toward him, and he could hear too much, he could
hear.
A tinkle of breaking glass, muffled laughter, a loud metallic
thonk.
More breaking glass.
A pause.
Low voices drifting to him on the cold wind. He was unable to pick up the
individual words; they were distorted.
Suddenly there was a perfect fusillade of blows; Sandy winced at the sound.
More breaking glass in the dark, and a tinkle of metal falling on the pavement
—chrome or something, he supposed. He found himself wishing Buddy had
brought more coke. Coke was sort of cheery stuff, and he sure could use
some cheering up right about now. It sounded as if some pretty bad stuff was
going on down at the far end of that parking lot.
And then a louder voice, urgent and commanding, Buddy's for sure:
"Do it there!"
A mutter of protest.
Buddy again: "Never mind that! On the dashboard, I said!"
Another mutter.
Buddy: "I don't
give
a shit!"
And for some reason this produced a stifle of laughter.
Sweaty now in spite of the knifing cold, Sandy suddenly slid his glass
window shut and snapped on the TV. He drank deeply, grimacing at the heavy
taste of the mixed fruit juice and cheap wine. He didn't care for it, but Texas
Driver was what they all drank when they weren't drinking Iron City beer,
and what was he supposed to do? Make out he was better than them, or
something? That would get him fried, sooner or later. Buddy didn't like
wimps.
He drank, and began to feel a little better or at least a little drunker. When
one of the Airport Security cars
did
pass, he hardly even flinched. The cop
raised a hand to Sandy. Sandy raised a hand right back, just as cool as you
could want.
About fifteen minutes after it had cruised toward the back of the lot, the blue
Camaro reappeared, this time in the exit lane. Buddy sat cool and relaxed
behind the wheel, a three-quarters-empty bottle of Driver propped in his
crotch. He was smiling, and Sandy noted uneasily how bloodshot and weird
his eyes looked. That wasn't just wine, and it wasn't just coke, either. Buddy
Repperton was no one to fuck with; Cunningham would find that out, if
nothing else.
"All taken care of, my good man" Buddy said.
"Good," Sandy said, and tried a smile. It felt a little sick. He had no feelings
about Cunningham one way or another, and he was not a particularly
imaginative person, but he could make a good guess about how Cunningham
was going to feel when he saw what had come of all his careful work
restoring that red and white Plymouth. Still, it was Buddy's business, not his.
"Good," he said again.
"Keep your jock on, man," Richie said, and giggled.
"Sure," Sandy said. He was glad they were going. Maybe he wouldn't hang
around Vandenberg's Happy Gas so much after this. Maybe after this he didn't
want to. This was heavy shit. Too heavy, maybe. And maybe he would pick
up a couple of night courses, too. He'd have to give this job up, but maybe
that wouldn't be so bad, either—it was a pretty dull fucking job.
Buddy was still looking at him, smiling that hard, gonzo smile, and Sandy
took a big drink of Texas Driver. He nearly gagged. For an instant he had an
image of puking down into Buddy's upturned face, and his unease became
terror.
"If the cops get in on it," Buddy said, "you don't know nothing, you didn't see
nothing. Like you said, you had to go in and take a crap around nine-thirty."
"Sure, Buddy."
"We all wore our wittle mittens. We didn't leave any prints."
"Sure."
"Stay cool, Sandy, Buddy said softly.
"Yeah, okay."
The Camaro began to roll again. Sandy raised the gate with the manual
button. The car headed toward the airport exit road at a sedate pace.
Someone called "Arf! Arf!" The sound drifted back to Sandy against the
wind.
Troubled, he sat down to watch TV.
Shortly before the rush of customers who had come in on the ten-forty from
Cleveland began to arrive, he poured the rest of the Driver out of the window
and onto the ground. He didn't want it anymore.
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