The Bear in a Muddy Tutu (21 page)

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Authors: Cole Alpaugh

BOOK: The Bear in a Muddy Tutu
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Chapter 26

The bear
popped her head out of the bag when the Jeep bumped out of the parking lot.

“Sorry,

Bagg called back to her, but she went back to gobbling the dog food.

Bagg found the turn onto Great Bay Boulevard, a long straight road that headed south, directly toward the ocean. For the first mile or so, the road passed through typical shore area neighborhoods, then a marina on the left and a few more side streets with houses that backed up to canals. But then the developments gave way to wetlands, and the only trees were the ones that lined either side of the road. Beyond those trees were marsh grasses and muddy ponds as far as the eye could see.

A little farther and the trees were gone, replaced by a deep sandy berm, and then a wide expanse of dark water off to the left. Bagg had been to beaches above and below this area but didn’t even know this middle ground existed. Bagg slowed the Jeep as the road became more and more covered with wind-blown sand.
He glanced
over his shoulder
to see
that
the bear
had eaten her way to the bottom of the bag
and
was
now gumming the thick paper,
slurping
at the crumbs.

Bagg drove over a series of small bridges and came to what appeared to be an old ranger station off to the left. It was hard to be sure from this far away, but there appeared to be a uniformed man sleeping on the front step, baseball cap pulled down over his face, and a tall, skinny bottle next to him. By the angle he was splayed out, Bagg got the impression the man was passed-out drunk.

A little past the ranger station, the bear in the back of Bagg’s Jeep let out a blood-curdling, right out of the deepest wilds of nature kind of thundering bellow. Bagg reflexively jerked the wheel, the Jeep’s front wheels slipping and then catching again, as he nervously checked the rearview mirror. Something had definitely
upset
the bear, and all the stories coming over the wire he’d read about animal attacks came rushing
back to
him.

*
*
*

“I smell home!

Gracie screamed out in bear language. “Home! Home! Home!

“Easy, girl,

the new
man
said to her, but she could smell the trucks and the other animals, and all the things she loved. Her good
man
was here, Gracie knew and tried to push herself up over the backseat to get a better look at where this
little truck
was going.

“Whoa!

the new
m
an said, but Gracie was able to get her front end over the seat and could see the top of one of the big white tents.

“There it is!

Gracie mewed, pushing her way up between the front seats as the new
man
drove them up and over a little bridge. Gracie could see the trucks now, and all the smaller tents, too. Her hair
stood
on end and she was rocking the entire Jeep back and forth as they pulled up to the back of one of
the
smaller trucks.

“Good
m
an!

Gracie called out in bear. She couldn’t see him, yet, but thought she might smell him. Yes, his scent was mixed in here somewhere, as she held her nose up and breathed in all those good, familiar smells. “Good
m
an!

she shouted again.

*
*
*

Slim Weatherwax was miserable, twisting the greasy wrench to bolt together fencing as the mechanics unloaded the kiddy rides behind him.
Neither his heart nor his throbbing head were in it, but this shit had to get done.
The roustabouts were finishing off the last of the small tents, obscuring most of Slim’s view of the mars
hes. Every couple of minutes
,
he
’d
struggle to his feet and shout Gracie’s name
between
cupped hands. It sent a jolt of pain right through his forehead, but he called just the same. Gracie wasn’t agile enough to climb up into truck wheel wells, wasn’t skinny enough to
duck down and
hide in any of the grasses. Slim
just couldn’t
understand, figured there must be something he was missing because his head was aching so badly from last night’s booze. The bad feeling in his gut was all Gracie, though.
Where that damn slobbering girl had gotten to was making him sick to death, b
ut
he
was too proud to ask
where they were,
what state owned this stretch of stinking muck they were setting up in. Not that he
’d get a good answer
,
since you weren’t ever suppo
sed to tell a drunk where
he
was
.
It was pretty much a law to screw with a drunk who
sobered-
up lost.

The sun beat down hard and Slim got to his feet to call Gracie’s name again when
a Jeep
came up and over the rickety island bridge off beyond the little tents. Anybody else probably would have thought it was having some sort of engine
troubles
, but Slim knew better.
He
knew that
wonderful and terrible
noise

what a man might mistake for a bull getting
its
balls twisted something fierce

coming from the vehicle was a lost bear who’d found her way home.
Slim
dropped the big wrench and ran.

*
*
*

Billy Wayne
also took
notice of the strange noises coming from the approaching vehicle, and reached into his open Samsonite and pulled out the Smith & Wesson .38 Special he’d only
fired
once before in his life.

“You took care of me once,

Billy Wayne crooned to his loaded gun, making some very bear-like noises of his own, as he struggled to get up from the piss-smelling cot. Billy Wayne emerged from his tent in time to see a large black bear tearing across the grassy muck, its giant claws throwing mud up in its wake. The bear seemed to have zeroed in on one of his flock,
one of
the sulky one
s
who’d sat off by himself during Bill Wayne’s vanilla pudding benediction.

Billy Wayne raised the gun like he had the night before, just as the bear began a last leap toward the helpless, cringing man. This was a much more difficult shot,
being a
moving t
arget and all
. He was one for one when it came to miracu
lous shots, as he
ge
ntly squeezed
the trigger, sighting down the barrel at the thirty
-
or
-
so yard target. With no more than a hair’s worth of pressure left to go, the gun suddenly exploded out of his hands and stabbed itself into the ground, stubby barrel first.

“Ouch!

Billy Wayne cried out, both hands stinging equally
. T
r
ying to
rub away the pain
,
Bil
ly Wayne looked up
to see the face of a strange man looming over him, breathing heavily.

“Why does everyone keep trying to shoot that bear?

Lennon Bagg asked.

 

Chapter 27

Billy Wayne imagined himse
lf high up in one of the old bi
planes trailing banners advertising Long Beach Island nightclubs and Coppertone
suntan
lotion. He’d look down on a true miracle, the birth of something he had led to this hallowed place. Fish Head Island had been
nothing until h
e’
d recognized its potential. It would look just like a beautiful flower opening its petals from up in those puffy clouds.

B
illy Wayne
barked
orders
he knew
nobody really listened to
. Not yet, anyway. But t
hey would grow to trust him over time
,
and he had plenty
of that
to spare, so he didn’t mind a bit of antipathy as long as they didn’t show it to his face. He had
called a meeting in his tent
headquarters
with the ride mechanics to go over a master plan for setting up. The two mechanics
seemed to agree
with Billy Wayne’s input,
shaking their heads while
sometimes
looking at each other,
then went back outside to do what they’d al
l done a thousand times before.
As long as
the work got done and
nobody made fun of him.

The
two large main tents were erected at the center of the island, side by side. Their
big
flaps opened toward the clanking kiddy rides and the ocean
inlet
beyond. These rides included the mini-motorcycles, a merry-go-round, a small roller coaster
that
only managed to rise and fall about six feet, and a truck ride where toddlers could beep horns and pretend to steer. The spinning chain swing needed a new clutch, and without the Pisanis to place an order, the ride remained packed on a truck.

Fourteen smaller tents went up in a semi-circle around the two main structures. All their flaps opened toward the center, giving visitors a clear, circular pathway around the main tents, ending at the kiddy rides and the gaping mouths of the big tents.

Billy Wayne’s red and yellow tent was
at
the near corner of the island
from
the bridge, directly behind the largest trucks.
O
nly from above would anyone see the miniature town created by the trucks. The vehicles were parked in such a way as to leave a
fifty
by
fifty
foot square in the middle. The camper trucks with retractable awnings mostly lined this common area, and there were at least a dozen small pup tents already in place. This was their village,
where the workers ate and slept,
the new heartbeat of the island.
Of Billy Wayne’s island.

The main security system for this area was in how the vehicles were arranged.
After
years of practice, the trucks were situated so anyone entering would need to walk through a narrow, up
-
and
-
back maze walled off by hulking circus machinery. Somewhere near the halfway point of the maze was a menacing German Sheppard-mix staked on a thick chain, just short en
ough to allow passage with
a little side-stepping.

It was low-tech security, but the mangy old mutt named Beelzebub had a hellish streak, having bitten nearly every one of the circus workers at one time or another. Even the recently deceased tiger had been wary of Beelzebub’s lousy temper.

“Is that the thickest chain we have?

Billy Wayne had come within inches of having Bee
lz
ebub clamp down on his buttocks
.
F
oaming spittle
had
splashed across the back of his pants.

“We’ve used it to tow the eighteen wheelers, boss.

The ride mechanic eyed the heavy iron chain
, probably regretting he’d had the dumb luck of being within earshot of the boss’ cries for help.

Billy Wayne used a tissue to wipe his pants, trying to convince himself his screams hadn’t
made people think
the damn dog had gotten hold of one of the little girls running around this place.

Visitor parking was delineated by orange cones poached from various road crew work areas
on
the countless highways the circus had passed through. Drivers would come over the low bridge onto the island and then be ushered immediately to the left. When that lot was full, cars were
to be
directed to a second and third lot to the right of the bridge. The old trick
, Billy Wayne had been told,
was to get people as far away from their cars as quickly as possible. Strand them with their wallets in hand, and decisions about whether to buy dinner were easier.

Although the circus owned two small generators, the ride mechanics had tapped into the pole
-
mounted transformer near the ranger shack. Large, relatively dangerous orange cords snaked through the marsh, humming with power.

“Anybody ever get hurt by rigging something like that?

Bill
y
Wayne stood over the cord
,
which disappeared under the canvas wall of one of the main tents.

“Well, no, boss,

the mechanic said, his greasy hand rubbing at the whiskers on his chin. “But we ain’t never stayed no place long enough to borrow off a pole.

“But it works, right?

“Long as it don’t rain.

The mechanic turned and stalked off, the first drops of an evening shower falling on their shoulders.

*
*
*

Game Warden
Clayton
Flint
’s life changed in these first days of the new arrivals to Fish Head. He took to drinking himself unconscious indoors, instead of out on his insect free front steps. The first couple of times he’d reached that
wonderful state of drunkenness

the place where there’s still plenty left in your bottle and yet you can’t seem to manage to get to your feet to pee

he’d been shaken something terrible by the sound of the lion. The big cat apparently suffered from emphysema and spent half-hour stints disengaging various wet chunks from its lungs.

Not totally unbearable in the middle of the day, but at three in the morning, just as you were entering the final stages of stupor, the effect was petrifying. So chilling was the deep, chuffing battle with its own fouled lungs
when you were drunk and battling bed spins
,
even some of the old timers had
been
complain
ing
, suggesting some strong cough medicine or
that maybe it was time to
put the sick old cat
out of its misery
.

Flint
seem
ed
to
become more ambitious
in his pest control tasks. He widened his spraying to include more than just the
ranger shack parking lot.
He
made a
slow lap around Fish Head Island every Thursday morning, once again happy to be killing bugs for a purpose
, singing
a
long to Bon Jovi songs blasting from his radio
. The laps also gave him
the
opportunity to note
which
spots
needed
to be cleaned up. The preacher kid was good about sending someone right out with a trash pick-up stick and garbage bag. It amazed
Flint
how an entire circus left less trash than city people coming down for a day of crabbing
, and he wasn’t shy about
giving
the workers
their due credit
.

On just the
ir
second night on Fish Head, the circus opened for business
, lights flashing and music rolling across the still marsh
. Three dozen cars parked in the lot
, mostly families and a few
crammed
loads of teenagers. A bottle of cheap vodka in one hand, Flint watched from the back step of the ranger station as not one person swatted the air around them.

*
*
*

Billy Wayne held vanilla pudding meetings
at
one o’clock each afternoon, about the time the last of the hardest drinkers had woken up
, followed by private consultations
.

“Boss, can I chew your ear

bout somethin’?

was how it almost always began.

“It burns like that time I ate a whole bottle of chili peppers when I take a piss,

was how it sometimes progressed.

Billy Wayne glowed with excitement
every time his tent flap opened, though. Nothing was too trivial for this Messiah. In fact, the trivial stuff was easier to deal with. With the house share of the receipts, Billy Wayne found a goldmine of relief at the pharmacy in West Tuckerton.

Creams for jock itch and shampoos for head lice. An extra fifty bucks dispersed with the technicality involving prescriptions for infections, and the various sexually transmitted diseases being swapped back and forth among patrons and roustabouts. Billy Wayne’s morbidly obese, hypochondriac mother had prepared him well for treating circus folk ills.

The psychological counseling was the most challenging and satisfying to Billy Wayne, especially when he seemed to get it right.

Step number twenty-nine from
How
t
o
B
ecome
a
Cult Leader
i
n 50 Easy Steps
: “People have a deep psychological need to keep their head
s
stuck firmly in a hole when confronted by
emotional issues
that
could cause discomfort. If avoiding such confrontation is even the tiniest bit possible, widen the hole for them to get their shoulders in, too. Ever hear the saying about whistling past the cemetery? Teach your followers to whistle
loudly and you’ll be
rewarded with
peace and accord
.

“I caught my Suzie screwin’ Omar.

“Omar from the bed of nails act?

“Yeah, I caught them screwin’ on the bed of nails.

“Hmm
.

Billy Wayne would pause, flipping back through his good book’s pages in his head for help. “Maybe they weren’t having sex. Maybe they were trying some new act and didn’t want to damage their clothes.

“She was moaning all hot and heavy. Then she came back to the trailer with little red nail marks on her knees.

“Jesus had nail marks,

Bill Wayne said in a solemn voice.

“So you’re sayin’ that maybe they wasn’t really screwing?

“I have some pills for you.

Bill Wayne would
hand them over, explain when and how many to take
.

The most unexpected addition to the circus was the new public relations department: a recently unemployed

and possibl
y
wanted
by the law

former reporter from the
Atlantic County
Beacon
named Lennon Bagg.

Billy Wayne was not the quickest witted of human beings, but easily recognized what a disaster this Bagg fellow had averted by knocking the gun out of his hands. Shooting the trained bear would have undone every last ounce of faith he’d created by plugging the
ferocious
tiger. In fact, Billy Wayne probably wou
ld have been lashed
to a cinderblock
and sunk to the bottom of the inlet for the crabs to pick over.

Returning the bear to the circus had also earned the former reporter a tent of his own

albeit slightly smaller than Billy Wayne’s

as well as his own piss-smelling cot. And retelling the story of the Absecon cop’s savage attempt on Graceful Gracie’s life also earned Bagg the protection and allegiance of the circus people.

“What kind of sick bastard would shoot a helpless old bear?

Slim Weatherwax had asked, while a large group had convened for beer and dogs at a fire pit in the center of the hidden common area. Billy Wayne, who had been lurking in the shadows, felt his stomach turn a little sideways at the close call.

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