pointed to the wooded area across from them; the bluff had given way to an area that seemed almost scooped out of the ground, thick with brush and trees.
“That’s a funny place to wait,” the fat man said, and something in his pocket exploded.
The bullet whizzed past Lyle but didn’t touch either him or his cherry-red Camaro. Lyle’s reflexes were the fastest thing about him, and he fired the .38 at the fat man, hitting him in the shoulder, on the same side as the torn smoking parka pocket. The sound of Lyle’s gun was a crack in the night, which echoed briefly before the howl of the wind—and the howl of the fat man—took its place.
Leo Corliss fell to his knees; the ground didn’t shake, and Lyle wondered why. The fat man’s pumpkin head was lowered. His eyes were squeezed tight and he clutched his shot-up shoulder, getting blood on his hand and smearing it on the parka.
“You have a gun in your pocket,” Lyle said, figuring it out.
“You are one fucking rocket scientist, aren’t you? You autistic son of a bitch . . .”
Lyle didn’t know what being artistic had to do with anything, but he walked over there and pulled the hot weapon, a little .22, a baby gun for such a fat hand, out of the shredded parka pocket, and tossed it, tossed it hard. It splashed into the river; it reminded Lyle of a bar of soap plunking in a tub of water.
“Get up, Mr. Corliss.”
Lyle helped him, pulling on the side of the good shoulder.
When the fat man got on his feet, he pushed Lyle and Lyle went down on the grass, on his butt, kind of hard. The fat man was waddling in the moonlight, trying to run, heading for the Camaro. Lyle shot the gun in the air.
The fat man stopped.
Then he turned and he spread his hands, one of them bloody, from his shoulder. “Why, Lyle? Why?”
“Pa’s getting out of the food stamp business.”
The man’s eyes were round and yellow. “So you’re going to kill me?”
“When Pa gets out of something, he gets out all the way. He don’t leave no trail.”
“What, killing people leaves no trail? Are you crazy as well as stupid?”
“I’m not stupid, Mr. Corliss,” Lyle said. Thinking, he added, “Or crazy neither.”
“You don’t want to kill me, do you?”
“No, sir. Not particularly.”
“I have money. You saw that money, back at my bar. I can give you that. I can give you more.”
“I don’t think so.”
“You can get out from under your daddy’s thumb. A good-looking boy like you should be out in the world, making a life for himself. Not, not living at home with your old man.”
“Pa’s good to me.”
“I’m sure he is, but you got to be your own man, Lyle. Now, put that away, and let’s get in the car.”
“You’d bleed on my ’polstery.”
“No, no I wouldn’t do a thing like that. We’ll, we’ll use my coat, we’ll tear my shirt, we’ll stop up the wound. Take me back where I can get some medical help and I’ll make you a very rich kid.”
“No. I do what my daddy tells me.”
“This is crazy! How many people does your daddy expect you to kill?”
“You’re the last. You’re six.”
The fat man’s mouth was open; he couldn’t seem to think of anything to say to that.
Finally he did: “Over fucking food stamps?”
“My pa takes precautions. Step across the road, Mr. Corliss.”
The wind sounded like a sick animal, crying down a canyon.
The fat man looked determined all of a sudden. Proud, sort of. “No. You do it right here.”
Lyle walked over to him and pointed the gun at him and said, “Turn around then, Mr. Corliss.”
“Fuck you.”
“Turn around.”
Slowly, he did. He was trembling. His jowls were like fleshy Jell-O.
Lyle pistol-whipped him and he went down with a whump. Lyle waited for a moment, listening for cars, didn’t hear any, and dragged the fat man across the road, by the feet, like the carcass of some dead animal, which essentially it was. A slimy trail of blood was left behind, but Lyle figured that