14
The afternoon after Panther James died, they buried him on the far edge of the mound near the ring of silver cypress trees which held the pond he had fished as a boy.
Myrtle James Cougar had accepted the news of her father’s death more stoically than I had anticipated. But late that night, while Hervey slept, I heard her sobbing through the plank walls of the shack.
The next morning, red-eyed, she busied herself with contacting the women of the Johnny Egret clan, who would prepare the death feast while the Egret men went with Hervey and me to dig the grave and ready the mound.
There were three of them—a man who seemed a little younger than Panther James, and his two sons, who were both well into their forties. Upon first meeting them, I found myself looking for fresh cuts on arms or face—signs of dog bite.
But there was none.
They were a stoic threesome, but friendly enough. They found the way I beat the bushes looking for snakes quite funny.
It made me think of the way Panther James had laughed at my friend Grafton McKinney.
While Johnny Egret supervised, we filled in the trenches dug by the graverobbers and picked up all the beer cans and cigarette wrappers. After the old man had surveyed the site and agreed the job was finished, they set about finding a proper place to bury Panther James.
I stayed in the background and listened to them talk. Hervey and Johnny Egret finally settled on a shady place at the far edge of the mound near the cypress head. They agreed that when the graverobbers inevitably returned, they would probably start at the middle of the mound—as they all do.
You could tell it was an unpleasant subject to the older man. To him, the trenches and the litter were all symbols that he too would probably fall victim to the artifact hunter’s shovel. Just as his sons would. And probably their children.
It was not easy work busting through the roots to softer ground where Panther James would be placed. And when we were halfway done, Hervey looked up at me and wiped his forehead with a sweaty hand.
“Some lemonade would be good, wouldn’t it?” I said.
He looked perplexed. “Lemonade?”
I nodded. “You know—lemonade.” The other men were listening, and I couldn’t say what I really meant. Myrtle’s husband hadn’t returned home that night. And I didn’t want him to get back and leave again before we had a chance to get a look at him. “Up at the house,” I said. “Why don’t you walk back there and get the lemonade?”
Suddenly understanding, he shook his head quickly. “Oh, the lemonade. Tell you what, Dusky, since this is family business, why don’t you walk back and get it? You’ve worked harder than any three men. So take a break.”
As I walked away, the Chesapeake thumped his tail at me. He rested in the shade with his bandaged head. He looked more ridiculous than fearsome.
“Watch out for snakes,” one of Johnny Egret’s sons yelled over his shoulder.
They all laughed.
The women were in the yard preparing a long table with food. Even Myrtle wore traditional dress now: ankle-length skirts sewn of colorful cloth, shawls over their shoulders, layers and layers of beads that seemed to elongate their necks.
Only Eisa wore jeans and T-shirt. She played in the shade with two raven-haired boys about her own age. The boys were showing off for her, each trying to top the other. One did handstands. The other did somersaults. Eisa clapped her hands gleefully.
In the hands of those three children rested the future of this ancient and little-known band of Indians—the Tequesta.
Myrtle smiled when she saw me, and slipped away from the other women at my signal.
“You look like you’ve been working hard,” she said. The change to traditional Indian dress complimented her. It brought out the earth colors of her skin and accented her crow-black hair.
“Not as hard as the others. I spent a lot of my time making sure I didn’t get snakebit.”
She chuckled. “I don’t blame you.”
There was an awkward pause while I scanned for a way to ask tactfully about her husband. She seemed to sense it. The smile left her handsome face.
“You’re wondering what happened to the pickup truck?”
“I hadn’t noticed that it was gone.”
“You’re a very bad liar, Dusky MacMorgan. All basically honest people are.”
“Then I should be an expert.”
“I think we both know better.”
“Then maybe I should come right out and ask about your husband. Hervey told you about Gator tearing a chunk out of the Swamp Ape’s costume. We’re both wondering why the dogs didn’t bark.”
I could see that it was an unpleasant subject. She turned to look at the other women working. She nodded toward her little house.
“I think we should talk inside.”
I nodded and followed her up to the house. She brought me a glass of cool well water, and we sat on the sparse furniture.
“He was here this morning?”
“Yes,” she said. “He was here. I told him about Papa. He seemed anxious to leave when he heard.” There was a resigned look of sadness in her face. “It is very hard for me to accept the possibility that he has something to do with all . . . this. But I think I suspected him all along. Maybe that is why I wanted so very much to believe there really was a swamp monster. My own husband . . .”
“But why? Why in the world would he go to such lengths? Wouldn’t the property become his after your father’s death anyway?”
She shook her head. “It’s clan land—and he’s a Cougar, remember. He’s not really Tequesta at all. The land would become mine. Mine and Eisa’s.” Her voice broke, and she took a moment to get hold of herself. She said, “This next thing is very hard for me to say. You will be the first person I have told. We have not been a happy husband and wife,” she said. “Our people blame it on Billy’s drinking and gambling. But I know that I am just as much to blame.”
I started to say something, but she cut me off. “No,” she said. “Let me finish. If that was Billy in the swamp-creature costume, you would not expect a father to frighten his own child so badly.”
“That’s the main thing in his defense.”
“Then he has no defense,” she said flatly. “You see, Dusky, Eisa is not his child.”
I said nothing, waiting for her to finish.
“Today you met Angus Egret, one of Johnny Egret’s two sons. Angus has a fine wife. She is working outside now. Seven years ago I fell in love with Angus. And he was in love with me. In other times, he would have moved his things out of their chickee and would have come to live with me, because that was the old way—and we were very much in love. But ways have changed. Instead, he seeded me with child. But could not become my husband. He was already with a wife, you see?”
“Did Billy Cougar know?”
She shook her head. “Not at first. I knew that it was necessary that I marry quickly. Billy was available. I knew that he drank and that he gambled. I did not know that he would beat me—and beat my child,” she added bitterly. “Like I said—it has not been a happy marriage.”
“No one knew but you and Angus?”
“Papa knew. He told me one day after Eisa was born. He saw it in a dream. I expected him to be upset. He wasn’t. He was very glad that Eisa was pure Tequesta. He liked Angus very much. Later, I think Billy began to suspect. There was nothing of him in Eisa. A parent would know. It made him that much meaner. We had no . . . relations after he began to suspect. He began to drink heavier. He spent all the money he made at the racetracks in Miami. In the last year or so, he’s been acting even stranger. He keeps talking about moving. He never wanted to leave before. I think he has been on drugs. He is rarely home, and Eisa hardly ever sees him—and for that I am glad.”
“What did he say when you saw him this morning, Myrtle?”
She shrugged. “Very little. His face was bandaged. He said that he had been in a fight. That’s when I knew. Hervey had told me about his dog attacking the creature. Like I said, when he learned of Papa’s death, he seemed very anxious to get away.”
“Do you know where he went?”
“Not for sure. He has been working for a construction company near here.”
“Do you know the name of it?”
She thought for a moment. “It’s a new place. Like a sales station or something. It’s called the Mickey Rather Development Corporation.”
“Can you tell me how to get there?”
She could. He had about a half-hour head start on me. Rather than bother Hervey—and take the chance of his missing his grandfather’s burial ceremony—I found the keys to the rental Ford and headed off alone through the cypress swamp toward the Tamiami Trail.
I felt bad for Myrtle James Cougar. Pick any race, any civilization, and the problems remain basically the same. People still struggle with the demands of the day-to-day—and a social structure in which love is too readily labeled as an infidelity.
Everything was beginning to add up.
Billy Cougar had always been a drinker and a gambler. And then he had fallen in with some construction company. You didn’t have to be an Einstein to guess who ran the company. I pictured the four drunken businessmen in their safari suits at Flamingo.
Fate had given us an early shot at them. And we had blown it.
Now the scenerio demanded a final encounter; a last act. And I was more than ready.
In Florida—perhaps more than anyplace else—the leisure-suit types carry too much weight. You get sick of their pushing and their wheeling-dealing and their own peculiar brand of development pornography.
People read their newspapers and worry out loud about the threat of destruction from nuclear-wielding countries. In truth, we face far more imminent danger from within. Steadily, inexorably, they sound our death knell with the roar of their dozers and their draglines, butchering our delicate land. They don’t build. They embalm.
I held my breath while crossing the rickety bridge and turned left toward Naples. It was Sunday, and the traffic on the Tamiami Trail was heavier than before. Buggish Japanese cars and the shiny American gas hogs roared through the space and isolation of the ’glades, leaving cypress trees fluttering in their windwake.
I held the rental Ford on the narrow asphalt, trying to keep pace with the traffic. A Standard station that promised cold beer and cigarettes, a cluster of small houses, and a post office the size and shape of an outhouse heralded the little settlement of Ochopee.
I followed Myrtle’s directions on past the Golden Lion Motor Inn—looking distinctly out of place in this wilderness of cypress and grass—and the Wooten Airboat ride concession with its red-white-and-blue streamers.
The dirt road I was looking for was just before the turnoff to Everglades City, and the Seminole-style Highway Patrol station there.
A bright metal sign screamed at me:
MICKEY RATHER CONSTRUCTION/SALES
BUILDING FOR A BETTER FLORIDA
And don’t they all?
I made the turn, worrying about the haze of dust the car trailed behind.
Myrtle had told me the construction office was about five miles inland. I decided to drive all but the last mile, then hide the car as best I could.
My plan was simple: just get a look at the layout so Hervey and I could return that night.
There was still the unanswered question: Why had Rather, the big boss man, gone to such bizarre lengths to make Panther James abandon his land?
If Hervey and I could break in that night and get a look at his records, we might be able to find out.
I kept a close eye on the car’s odometer. After three miles, I slowed to an idle. The place was closer than Myrtle had guessed. Beyond the bend, above a crop of Australian pines, I could see a protruding television antenna.
I had passed a little clearing, so I stuck the car in reverse and backed up. The red car was easily seen behind the circle of oaks, but it couldn’t be helped.
I wouldn’t be long.
I made my way through the brush toward the antenna. Sandspurs grabbed at my pants, and mosquitoes whined in the shade of trees, away from the September heat.
The Mickey Rather construction and sales site was nothing more than a mobile home on cement blocks. It had a take-the-money-and-run look to it.
The trailer sat in the middle of a large shell drive. There was a mound of building material under a tarp beside it, and a big yellow Bucyrus bulldozer. Beyond that, near the edge of a cypress head, sat two jeeps. One was new, the other World War II vintage. They both had big balloon wheels with chains belted to the tread.
In front of the mobile home was the dark-blue Cadillac. And the pickup truck I had seen at Panther James’s camp.
I was about two hundred yards away, peering through the brush. Occasionally a dim shape would cross the curtained windows.
I was trying to decide whether to try and get a closer look or just wait until I came back that night with Hervey when I heard the shot.
It was not the crack of a small-caliber weapon. It was the deep thrump of something big, like abbreviated thunder.
I ducked back into the bushes, wondering how in the hell they had seen me.
And then I realized they hadn’t.
The door of the trailer swung open, and one of Mickey Rather’s yes-men I recognized from Flamingo came running outside. There was a chunk of canvas covering the older jeep. He grabbed it and went running back into the mobile home.
I wasn’t anxious to leave now. I was going to stay and see just what in the hell was going on.
After about five minutes, the door opened again. Rather’s two yes-men were carrying something in the tarp. They had their jackets off and their ties loosened. They tried to hold the tarp away from their bodies as if it was distasteful—the way some people carry garbage.
Halfway to the jeep, one of them stumbled. The tarp buckled and a body came spilling out.
I had never seen Billy Cougar before, but there was little doubt that it was him. His face had been shot away, and the black Indian hair was matted with blood.
When they dropped him, Mickey Rather came charging out of the trailer. He looked this way and that anxiously, then yelled something at his two men. He held a long-barreled revolver in his hand. There was a chunk of gauze on his neck where the dog had gotten him.
So Billy Cougar had gone to report the news of Panther James’s death to his new boss.
And something had gone wrong. Deathly wrong.
Billy Cougar had been a drunk and a gambler and had fallen in with the enemies of his people—and his land.
And he had paid the ultimate price for it. His life.
I watched them load the corpse into the newer of the jeeps, then cover the whole thing with a tarp.
Mickey Rather handed the revolver to one of his men, who trotted off toward the cypress head—probably to bury it.
And still the chunky boss man scanned the brush around the parking lot, as if looking for someone—or as if worried the law would come swooping down, sirens screaming, to catch them in the act.
I had seen enough.
Had the circumstances been different—had I been on an assignment—I would have begun planning a way to crack this construction ace and his men into a bunch of little pieces.
Instead, as I walked back to my car, I tried to think of ways to convince Hervey that this was now a matter for the law.
Until now, they hadn’t really done anything illegal. A man can’t kidnap his own daughter—even if he is dressed up in a gorilla suit.
And trying to scare people off their property—for whatever reasons—isn’t right, but it’s not the sort of thing that lasts long in court.
But now they had made the big jump. They had killed a man in cold blood.
And I was more than willing to be an eyewitness.
Mockingbirds chattered in the oaks above my car. I gave it a minute or two before stepping into the clearing.
In the process of loading the body and disposing the weapon, one of Rather’s men had not made himself seen. And it was no time to take chances.
When I was sure no one was around, I walked quickly to the car, fired it up, and backed out onto the dirt road.
But that’s as far as I got.
Because that’s when I felt the cold steel of a revolver pressed against the veeing where spinal cord enters the cranium.
The fourth man had hidden himself in my backseat.
“My, my, my, if it isn’t Mr. Rough and Tough from Flamingo—no, don’t turn around. I’ll shoot you where you sit if you turn around. We’re going to kill you anyway, but I’d like the boss to get a few cracks at you first. He was upset about the Flamingo episode, buster boy. Real upset. But your dying will make him feel a whole lot better. . . .”