Denizen of "The Pit." Decorated veteran. The whole of Kung Fu knew about Lt. Col. (Ret.) Clarence W. Dermoody. He'd styled himself as the model of the rough-and-tumble high school principal, righting the sinking ship of a troubled learning institution. Two tours in Vietnam. Everyone knew that Dermoody saved Cap'n Joe's life when they were both serving there. Saved him from some kind of ambush in the jungle. Supposedly it was an amazing story, but I wouldn't know. I never really listened when people told it. I was always more interested in the present. In the last year or so, Dermoody had been on the cover of plenty of magazines preaching his own specific brand of "tough-love education." He even trademarked that term and sold a kit with a videotape in it of him just going off about how educators should handle themselves in tough environments. The man was vain.
His office got called "The Pit" because there was an exit door in his second-floor office that opened into an inaccessible hallway that led to the parking lot. So it was possible to enter from his secretary's office and not leave via the same door. You know, like you just fell in a pit. That was the primary reason no one ever answered notes from Dermoody, not voluntarily anyway. Everything went through the heads of the families. But I had a feeling that Dermoody was just sending out notes, then marking down who showed up to take care of it, slowly compiling lists just to see who was in whose family. It was only a matter of time before he used that information to his own advantage.
He couldn't turn us all in though. He needed us, well, certainly needed those families loyal to Ridley to keep pushing the product. He needed his 15% cut of the operation to finance his sizable gambling habit. Just seeing his face when the secretary opened the door let me know that he was ready for more than 15%. A lot more.
"How good of you to join us. I was sure you wouldn't come. In fact, I was just telling Joe that, wasn't I, Joe?" Dermoody was red. Bright red from a nasty sunburn, which meant that he was probably off in Barbados again, banking offshore money. His big plum of a nose was peeling too.
As a rule, it's best not to look at Dermoody, but to kind of bow your head instead. He loves that crap.
"Yessir." Cap'n Joe stood at attention on the back wall, right next to the American flag in its little brass holder.
"Don't sit, stand," Dermoody said.
I stopped midsit and stood up to the left of the chair. I was a puppet, being walked from one office to another while fixing to snip these strings. That was the game though and, for now, I had to keep playing. Two picture frames full of medals were hung on the wall about the same height as my eye level. It was obvious why he didn't want me to sit. Because this way, I was forced to see the "mystique" of the man. Face to face with the reflected light from the medals that made me squint. I was pretty sure one of Dermoody's desk lamps had been purposely angled to create that effect.
Next to the shiny brass lapel pins and pretty ribbons were pictures. Black-and-white mostly, there was one of Dermoody and Cap'n Joe together, both holding big guns and smiling like hunters, like kids. Even if it was from years and years ago, it was -RyKNW'4 weird seeing them smile. I guess the photo was taken in Vietnam. In it, a pack of cigarettes was tucked underneath Dermoody's helmet, covering his left ear, but he wasn't smoking in the picture. He had a real deep voice, Dermoody did. It brought me back to the situation at hand.
"Ridley's gone soft," Dermoody said, and then exhaled like it was some huge revelation. "You know he just doesn't listen to me anymore, doesn't listen to good sound advice."
Joe put a hand on my shoulder. When I say put, it was more like slammed. I slipped to my knees on the floor. Of course, I hammed it up a little. Made it look like it hurt worse than it did. Still though, it was bad.
"Joe here tells me that you were a witness to a certain sack of Alfredo potatoes that needed to be buried in the garden. Now, how could that be? Ridley made sure to tell me that there was only one witness, this new friend of yours. What was his name, Joe?"
"Chang, sir."
Jimmy.
"Ah yes, Chang."
Why would Ridley protect me? Maybe he really did like me and it wasn't some kind of angle? Maybe he was running something on Dermoody as well? He had to be. Everything was an angle.
"You know the score, young lady. Technically, you shouldn't be here and neither should your friend. This is the time of year when we need more fertilizer than ever for our greenhouse."
Greenhouse? Fertilizer? He was just trying to scare me. The only good news was that if he meant to transfer me, he would've already done it. He wanted something or I wouldn't still be alive.
"Now the way I see it, he's scared, Ridley is. I mean, it used to be minimal and manageable with his affection for you but now, with that little stunt your friend pulled yesterday, well, I'd say he's real scared and prone to doing something rash any day now. See, it doesn't help that this stunt is damn near causing hysteria around here.
"Do you know that I've already had fifteen teachers telling me they had trouble keeping order because of it? And we both know that little Jimmy isn't even in fifteen classes. Such is the spillover effect. It's chaos, and I'll tell you what, we don't need chaos at King High School. We need order. We need rigidity for our wayward young minds."
Ridley didn't seem scared to me, but I wouldn't blame him if he was. Jimmy was the X factor, the only thing in all of Kung Fu that could keep it from spinning out of control or tear it all apart before anyone was ready to make a move.
"Yes sir, that sure was a real neat trick though. For my part, I can't understand how he did it, but more than that, I don't care. What I see is potential, and potential is such an important thing, young lady."
Uh-oh. Here it comes.
"But see, we can be friends here. Ridley's getting much too big for his britches and he's slipping. Everyone here at King would be so much better off if he wasn't running those despicable drugs through here." Dermoody took a sip from his big gray mug that said "Principal of the Year" on it. "Ah, that's good coffee, Joe."
I had a pretty good idea what he meant by that. Good-bye days of the 15% cut, hello everything.
"If Ridley had an accident and you and your friend didn't, well, I think neither one of you would need to go to class anymore. I could arrange a pass on your high school equivalency tests and you'd never have to fight for your survival again. No more circles, no more 'rolling' as you kids call it. Sound pretty tempting? You could just disappear into the hills and never come back." He licked his lips. "You could be free."
With that, Cap'n Joe let go of my shoulder and opened the door behind me. The door to the secretary's office, thank god. I got up, dusted myself off, and walked out. Probably the only thing that made the ordeal worthwhile was the look of surprise on the secretary's face as I walked out that way. Apparently she hadn't figured me for using her door twice. I moved past her, swung the outer office door open so hard it banged against the wall, and ducked out.
Everybody was still in class, so I walked the vacant halls solo. Needed to think. Dermoody wanted me to look at the carrot on the stick and not the person holding the pole that dangled the damn thing in front of me. Even if Jimmy and I survived a showdown with Ridley, Dermoody would transfer us permanently. He'd do what any good prince would do. Take power and clear out everyone who had anything to do with the taking of it. We'd seen Ridley kill 'Fredo and I'd seen Cap'n Joe doing his DBD thing for Dermoody. So even if Ridley didn't care, I was still a witness, and still too dangerous to keep around. The Ridleys and Dermoodys of Kung Fu certainly didn't get to where they were by leaving people behind to rat on them.
Maybe everyone was right, or at least half right. Ridley wanted Jimmy dead, Melinda out of the way, and me for himself. Melinda wanted survival, Jimmy for herself, and me out of the way? Hard to tell. Then again, Ridley would never let that happen because Jimmy was too much of a threat; that still wouldn't've stopped him from agreeing to it. And yet that meant Dermoody was probably right too, Ridley was slipping in even wanting to keep me alive, and they were both scared by the threat that Jimmy posed, especially now. Slipping or not, the scariest thing about Ridley was that he was invisible. That he could still do anything without needing to make a big show of it. He was as dangerous as ever, maybe even more so. And yeah, Dermoody was still scared of him. Otherwise he wouldn't hide in his office all day.
It was enough to give me a headache. I slowed my steps, checked the hall clock. Second period wasn't over for another three minutes yet. So it was just little old me in the hallway in front of my locker, bending down, checking to make sure the scuff marks on my boots hadn't gotten any bigger. Kung Fu wasn't such a bad place when it was empty. I twisted the lock set into the flimsy metal, put in the combination, and pulled the handle when it clicked. I opened it damn sure the only thing I could count on was that the showdown was coming and whether it really was the Friday after next, or sooner, it was unavoidable.