Dirty White Boys

Dirty White Boys by Stephen Hunter Page A

Book: Dirty White Boys by Stephen Hunter Read Free Book Online
Authors: Stephen Hunter
Ads: Link
I’m afraid maybe he fell or something, can’t get to the phone. People shouldn’t live so isolated like that.”
    “Well,” said Bud, “I’ll call Dispatch and see if anything’s going on they need us for. If not, maybe we’ll take a spin by.”
    Lamar let Richard shower and sleep first, because Richard had driven while Lamar and Odell slept. So Richard sank into dreamless oblivion, a mercy. But when Lamar shook him awake at nine, he was still in the Stepfords’ upstairs bedroom, still an escaped convict, still in the company of murderers.
    Richard pulled on a pair of Bill Stepford’s jeans and a blue workshirt and then settled in to do two things at once, under Lamar’s instructions. He was to sit in the upstairs bedroom and keep watch, just in case. And he was to draw lions.
    “Ah, now, Lamar? With everything that’s going on?”
    “Yes sir. I want it done, I want it perfect, so that when the time comes, we can move to the next step.”
    What next step?
    Anyway, he now sat doodling, the original much-studied sketch before him. It was beginning to fade into gibberish, just a random blotch of lines. He wondered what Lamar saw in it to begin with. He knew it was insufferably banal: a lion, a woman, some sort of crazed Aryan fantasy, something out of the Hyperborean age. It matched exactly Lamar’sarrested stage of development, but it had nothing to do with art; it was, rather, something out of that great unwashed fantasy life of the lumpen proletariat that expressed itself on the sides of vans or in comic books or boorish, bloody, boring movies. It was so coarse, untainted by subtlety or distinction.
    Yet it had saved his life, he knew: It had in some way tamed Lamar’s rage and redirected it, made Lamar see there was more to life than predation. And the drawing itself: There
was
something wildly savage and free in it that Lamar himself had responded to but which Richard had since been unable to capture, whether he stuck with lions or moved on to tigers and eagles. When he thought about it, it went away; you just couldn’t do something like that offhandedly. It was a left-brain, right-brain thing. Lamar had understood and let Richard have a little bit of room on the issue. But now he was pressing him for results.
    Fortunately, the farmer had a large selection of paper and pencils available. Working with a No. 2, Richard sat at the window, looking out dreamily, and tried to imagine some savage savannah where man and cat were the same creature, but woman was still woman. And on this plain, the strongest ruled, by tooth and claw and without mercy. And of these creatures, the most powerful and cunning was Lamar, Lamar the Lion, who wasn’t merely a killer but also a shrewd and cunning king.
    Richard’s pencil tip flew across the page; he felt deeper into the concept of
lion
than ever before, as if he’d somehow entered the red zone, the mindset of the jungle, where you looked at other life-forms and one question entered your mind: What does it taste like?
    He stopped. Hmmm, not bad.
    Dreamily, he looked out the window. He tried to imaginea plain dotted with zebra and giraffe and cape buffalo and little wily antelopes, and the ever-present hyenas.
    And he almost saw it, too, though the illusion proved difficult to sustain when he noticed a black-and-white Oklahoma Highway Patrol cruiser rolling down the road toward the house.
    Even though Bud was driving, he was still in his surly mood.
    “Ted, you really ought to call Holly.”
    “Nah” was all Ted could say.
    “She’ll be worried,” he said.
    “The truth is, Bud,” said Ted, “we just don’t have much to talk about these days. I let her down, too. I can see in her eyes, I don’t mean a thing to her. Goddamn, how I love her and there she is, and I can’t reach her.”
    Bud swallowed uncomfortably. Something seemed to come up into his throat. Ted was truly miserable, stewing in his own pain.
    “Now you and Jen, you have a perfect marriage. You’re

Similar Books

The Sacred Shore

T. Davis Bunn

No Lovelier Death

Graham Hurley

The Duke’s Desire

Margaret Moore

Flicker

Melanie Hooyenga

The Winner's Kiss

Marie Rutkoski

Cion

Zakes Mda

Gecko

Ken Douglas