Monday evening. Wild Bill and warpy had remained at the hippycamp while everyone else was up at the house enjoying the picnic. hippyhubby was fretting and stewing that they’d been up here the whole holiday weekend, and for the first time, had not seen either franksolich or his cohort, the retard.
warpy finally admitted to hippyhubby that hippywife Mrs. Alfred Packer had confirmed that the inhabitant of the house was one of the two he was looking for; she of course had never seen him before, but hippywife had. Wild Bill quit packing up his set of cadaver carvers, slamming one of them down on the table.
But he’d deal with hippywife later, back home, in a way she wouldn’t forget, for not telling him.
As darkness descended and the faraway picnic was breaking up, the rest of the hippyparty returned to the hippycamp, so as to take everything down and pack it away, hitting the road for home, northeastern Oklahoma.
“Okay,†hippyhubby Wild Bill announced, “here’s the deal. I’m going to deal with the retard myself, I don’t need anybody’s help. I’ll get him to reveal where franksolich is; we still got an hour or so, before having to take off. If franksolich is close enough, we’ll get him yet tonight.
“The retard’s going to take us right to franksolich, and if the retard causes any problems, well, we’ll be taking back two sets, not one, of Nebraska corn-fed steaks. We don’t want the retard, but we’ll take him if we have to.â€
Some of the others insisted they should probably go along with Wild Bill, in case he needed help.
“The retard’s a retard. A perfect set-up; I could do this with one hand tied behind my back, without any help from anybody else.â€
hippyhubby looked over the assortment of weapons and equipment, and chose to take the 24†cadaver carver and 50’ of rope.
As Wild Bill slinked through the darkness to the house, he noticed the host was still with three of the guests, the tall eyeglassesed woman, the neighbor, and the bug-eyed caretaker, talking with them out in the yard. Damn, he thought, too many.
They were picking up litter left over from the picnic. Once done, the host and the woman stood inside the lighted garage, hippyhubby peering through a window. He and she had a conversation, after which she walked to her car, and left.
The neighbor and the bug-eyed one brought a plastic garbage-bag filled with litter into the garage, after which they stood around for a while, chitchatting. The host finally indicated he was tired, and so the other two said their “good-byes†and walked down to their own motor vehicles.
The retard stood inside the garage for some minutes, looking out into the darkness, and then shut off the light, going inside the house.
The host shut off the light on the porch, and then went to the computer inside. Wild Bill watched him through one of the dining-room windows. He checked the Drudge Report, and then logged off. He went in to the kitchen and dumped some cat-food into a bowl on the floor, and changed the water in the other bowl.
Then he went into the bedroom and got undressed for bed.
Well, hippyhubby thought to himself; stupid and now without a stitch.
How much more vulnerable could one possibly be?
And if the retard needed taken down, they’d be spared the trouble of skinning him.
Wild Bill waited a while, and then circled the house, to the front. He tripped a couple of times in the darkness, but there was no indication he’d been heard.. He went in the front door, and in the darkness there groped his way towards the bedroom, whose light was already out.
He tripped a couple of times, making noise, but oddly, not a stir from the bedroom.
Opening the door to the bedroom, he fingered for the light-switch, and at the same time he flicked it on, he bent into a crouching position, the cadaver carver in both hands, letting out a sudden screech as if a Samurai warrior.
“
EEEE-OW!â€
Startled by the sudden flash of light—of course, he couldn’t hear the scream—the occupant of the bed jerked up, tossing aside the covering sheet, banging his back against the wall.
He stared at the crouched Wild Bill, agony writ all over his face. When bending down, hippyhubby had thrown his back out of joint again, and was suffering.
The occupant stood over him, hands on hips, looking at him blankly.
Finally, he understood. His unexpected guest was writhing in pain.
Noticing the rope and cadaver carver, the host picked them up and walked to the front door, where he tossed them out onto the front yard. Then he returned to the bedroom, where hippyhubby was still twisting on the floor, in unspeakable pain and agony.
He let Wild Bill twitch and convulse for a while, until the muscles and nerves had settled down, and then helped him to his feet, walking him out to the living room, hoping to get him out the door and out of his life. Propping himself up, his arms and hands staked on the dining room table, hippyhubby was still in pain, red-faced, and sweating.
But he had to get franksolich, and this retard could lead him to franksolich.
But how does one grapple with a naked man, to get him to talk?
hippyhubby, in between bursts of pain, decided to use diplomacy, “explaining things.â€
He said he was looking for this guy’s friend.
The other guy stared at him blankly, not understanding.
He repeated, he was looking for his friend.
The other one stared at him blankly.
Wild Bill was starting to get hostile, but at the same moment the retard realized something, and without saying anything, casually brushed the hair on the side of his head away, revealing an absence of an ear. Then he did it to the other side; no ear there either.
hippyhubby gaped in astonishment, not so much at the absence of ears, but at the sheer insolent contempt with which his host bared himself; it was a cold malignant hate-filled stare, that look.
Fearful, Will Bill tried by gesticulations and ostentatiously mouthing words, to learn the whereabouts of the friend. He didn’t mouth “franksolich,†though; he simply said repeatedly, “your friend, the cowboy, that one guy you’re always with.â€
The occupant lifted an index finger, signaling that he understood; hippyhubby was looking for a friend of his. But which friend? “Friend,†“cowboy,†“the one guy†he was always with, weren’t descriptive enough; he had lots of friends who fitted those words.
He went over to the buffet in the dining room, and pulled out a small photograph album. He flipped through the pages, most of the pictures having to do with the exploration of the William Rivers Pitt some summers previously, but there were a few others, too, other people, other places, other times.
In those photographs that had them, he pointed out each male subject, at which Wild Bill shook his head; not the one he was looking for. But then on the third-from-the-last page, there was a photograph taken in North Dakota the autumn of 2009, of two guys, the one standing in front of hippyhubby, and the other one a blond cowboy.
Wild Bill jabbed his finger at the cowboy; that was who he was looking for.
That was him. Where was he, hippyhubby demanded to know.
“But he’s not around,†Wild Bill was told; “this weekend, he’s down somewhere in northeastern Oklahoma, around Tulsa, looking at some horses.â€
the end