chapter 2.
The first thing Myron needed was a suit of clothes—the current one was unsalvageable, but he didn’t need anything that nice, really. Just anything that had not dashed through the muddy, thorny woods at night.
The bow and tube Gloria stashed at the bowling alley, under a ceiling panel in the ladies’ room. Then, on the bus ride out to the purlieus along Kimbark Avenue, she smoked incessantly and explained to Myron the basic tenet of life on the C. You simply (she said) had to be absolutely certain of everything you say. Most people are rarely absolutely certain, so if you sounded like you know what you were talking about, they would tend to go along with you. Should you ever meet someone else who is absolutely sure, apologize for the mistake and leave. This person is probably too stupid to fool and may be extremely dangerous.
The bus let them off in a quiet residential neighborhood. Two streets over they came to a small children’s-clothing store—but they didn’t go in. Leaving Myron outside, Gloria went to the bagel shop next door and came out empty-handed.
“I am pretty hungry,” Myron said.
“There’ll be time for that later, we’re working. I went in there and asked for one hundred and ninety-nine onion bagels. The woman was surprised, and she asked me why I didn’t order two hundred. I said, Are you crazy? Who can eat two hundred bagels? Then we both laughed. So you get it?”
“Yeah, I guess,” Myron said.
“This way, when I say, sure, give me two hundred bagels, she can’t object—it was practically her idea. I told her I was going to be dropping them off at various local businesses as part of a charity drive. Now I sound like a mensch. She just told me to come back in a couple of hours, with the understanding that I would pay on delivery. Do you follow it so far? Now to look at suits.”
They spent a long time in the clothing store. The proprietor was an old man who drew a sharp intake of breath when he saw Myron, but Gloria quickly explained that “boys be boys,” and she needed new church clothes for her grandson. Myron did look a fright; he always looked a fright, but this was something special. He had to be careful not to touch any of the suits, lest he get mud on them, but Gloria held them up in front of him to eyeball a size. The suit and a new shirt were priced at almost a hundred dollars, and Myron warned her in a whisper that he had no money.
“You don’t need money when you’re on the C. This is what you have to do. When I open the door, you run out, go next door to the bagel shop, and open the door; catch the woman’s eye and then leave. She should step outside after you—it’s important she step outside. Can you do that?”
They brought their selection to the front counter, and the man rang them up and boxed the ensemble, nestled in tissue paper.
“I done forget my wallet,” Gloria said, tucking the box beneath her arm. “You mind if it go on my account?” She took a step to the right and opened the door, and Myron darted out.
The proprietor looked worried, and he stepped out from behind the counter. “Ma’am, I don’t mean nothing by it, but I don’t know you. I never seen you before. You don’t have no account here, and I hope I don’t sound suspicious if I say so.” As he opened the door to the bagel shop, Myron could hear the man saying something more or less like this. And there in the bagel shop the woman gasped at the sight of this tiny revenant, and came running out after Myron, who was backpedaling.
And so, at that moment, Gloria stood in the open door of the clothing store, its proprietor a half step behind her, and the bagel seller a few feet to her right. The three of them made almost a straight line, with Myron the anomalous point, floating away backwards into the parking lot. It was at the moment that Gloria took control of the situation. Turning to the bagel woman, she said, “When you have two hundred for me, honey?”
Surprised, the woman said she needed another hour or two.
“Well, make sure he get one hundred, will you?” Gloria said. Then she smiled and nodded at the clothing store proprietor, who could no longer very well object. He was grinning, and the grin was a grin of heartbreaking trust. And as the door dinged shut behind her, Gloria said to the bagel seller, “I’m a come back in an hour.”
Gloria gestured Myron over and took him by the hand. The woman returned to her bagels. Myron and Gloria walked away. They hopped on the first bus they saw.
“That was called the Laurie, after Joe Laurie, who invented it,” Gloria lectured.
“What’s that woman going to do with two hundred onion bagels?” Myron asked. “What’s that man going to do when he figures it all out?”
“You did a good job today. Now we’ve got to get you cleaned up.”
Gloria was currently staying in an abandoned and crumbling building. To get to her section of the building you had to pass over a part with no floor. Gloria as a gorilla could go hand over hand above the hole, but Myron could only nervously balance his way across a narrow beam. On the far side, Myron got washed in a basin of rainwater, and Gloria put on a bright orange muumuu.
“You put on loose clothes and hope they’ll work with the change,” she complained, “and it almost all works except for the underthings.”
They cleaned off Myron’s shoes, Gloria fashioned fake socks (she’d forgotten to get socks!) out of the pieces of his vest that had not been soiled, and, after a quick amateur haircut, Myron was presentable. “Now let’s go see what we can find out.”
With the speed of a montage, they went on a whirlwind tour of retirement communities in Chicago and environs. The plan was Gloria’s. Myron would go in the front. Usually he could just duck under the front desk and no one noticed him, but if they noticed him, and didn’t ignore him under the assumption that he was someone’s renegade grandson, one look at his face usually shut them up long enough for him to get away; now that he was well groomed, and it was clear his face was not the result of a raw wound but was actually stuck that way, they were just too embarrassed to stop him. Then Myron would hasten to a rear fire door and let Gloria in. That was his only job, and sometimes he would slip out as she slipped in, to meet up with her later; but sometimes he would stick around to learn. Gloria would go to the rec room, pretend to be new here, find three more for bridge, and after losing a few rubbers, say, “Well, we could continue to play for pennies, but why don’t we make this next rubber interesting?”
Basically, she cheated old people at cards. Myron didn’t see how this helped him, but she did, on occasion, ask her partner casually about a particular canine fellow. Angel Sanchez, his name might be, or Hussein El-Agale, or Jack Thompson. On street corners, she’d approach a news vendor, or a prostitute, and make a casual inquiry. Days went by. The doomsday device and Myron’s precious bow were moved to a more secure hiding place. She and Myron ate well, and the squatter’s quarters Gloria favored were surprisingly warm and even cozy. But there was no sign of any coyote.
Myron was practically writhing in frustration at the delay. “Maybe you shouldn’t go see the Rosicrucians after all, maybe you should just live life on the C,” Gloria suggested. But Myron was adamant. He had no reason to trust the Rosicrucians; but the fact that he had no reason to distrust them made them, he maintained, unique in all the world. Gloria sniffed at his answer and launched into another lecture.
Because Gloria lectured Myron, incessantly, especially on how there was no point in lecturing anyone. The only true propaganda was propaganda by the deed. As far as Myron could tell, propaganda by the deed meant doing whatever jerky stuff you felt like doing. “‘There are no innocent bourgeois,’” Gloria said, quoting Emil Henry, who had been guillotined by the French government in 1894 merely because he was a murderer and a terrorist.
“‘The advocates of a criminal are seldom artists enough to turn the beautiful terribleness of the deed to the advantage of the doer,’” she added, quoting Nietzsche. And she shook her fist, at the world, over the tragic fate of Emil Henry.
“Did you know Nietzsche was murdered,” Myron said, “by the flying squirrel?”
“That’s just an urban legend,” Gloria said. Her eyes were blazing with fire. When they started to blaze, Myron knew he was not going to get a lot from her. But at other times her advice was useful. She taught him to watch, at cards, for people’s tells, little twitches or gestures that would reveal their hand. She also taught him how to read cards in the reflections in people’s glasses, and switch decks while pretending to cut.
And watching her he learned how to change his dialect to fit in with whomever he was talking to. No matter what animal you were, Gloria explained, to get along you also had to be a chameleon.
They went to the library, purportedly to follow a lead about Angel Sanchez, but probably, Myron suspected, just to look up where there were more old folks’ homes. Gloria pointed out to Myron a hand-lettered sign on the wall. NO GUM CHEWING ALLOWED.
“So?” Myron asked. “That makes sense. People might put gum under the tables, or in a book.”
“So why don’t they just make a rule that you’re not allowed to put gum under the tables? Why do they ban gum altogether?”
“Well, it’s hard to catch people sticking gum somewhere. It’s much easier to catch them chewing it.”
Gloria nodded. “That’s very important. Most rules are there not to help you or make your life better but to make things easier for the rule enforcers. Always remember that.”
And as soon as she said it, Myron suddenly understood a lot about his junior high experience. It made a lot more sense now.
“The moose never taught you anything like this,” Gloria gloated.
The lead was a dud, of course. Lead after lead was a dud, and the coyote, as coyotes do, remained elusive. They did manage to acquire quite a nest egg, though, and one day Gloria said, “Now I’m going to teach you about the system.”
Gloria had never spoken so positively about the system, so Myron was confused. But it turned out Gloria meant her system for betting on the ponies. This system proved flawed, too, and she lost almost all their money in forty-five minutes, and then spent the rest on gin. That night, Myron finally told Gloria that Spenser was dead, and she cried and threw the gin bottle off a rooftop, and then had to go steal a new one. Myron was worried he was getting nowhere.
And one day, as he walked along the back alleys, he felt his neck prickling, and when he looked up, he saw something that might have been a cat leap across the gap between rooftops and then run away. Black and white on its tail. It might not have been a cat. Myron was getting scared.
Immortal Lycanthropes
Hal Johnson's books
- Immortal Prophecy
- Immortally Embraced
- Immortal Hearts
- An Immortal Descent
- A Betrayal in Winter
- A Bloody London Sunset
- A Clash of Honor
- A Dance of Blades
- A Dance of Cloaks
- A Dawn of Dragonfire
- A Day of Dragon Blood
- A Feast of Dragons
- A Hidden Witch
- A Highland Werewolf Wedding
- A March of Kings
- A Mischief in the Woodwork
- A Modern Witch
- A Night of Dragon Wings
- A Princess of Landover
- A Quest of Heroes
- A Reckless Witch
- A Shore Too Far
- A Soul for Vengeance
- A Symphony of Cicadas
- A Tale of Two Goblins
- A Thief in the Night
- A World Apart The Jake Thomas Trilogy
- Accidentally_.Evil
- Adept (The Essence Gate War, Book 1)
- Alanna The First Adventure
- Alex Van Helsing The Triumph of Death
- Alex Van Helsing Voice of the Undead
- Alone The Girl in the Box
- Amaranth
- Angel Falling Softly
- Angelopolis A Novel
- Apollyon The Fourth Covenant Novel
- Arcadia Burns
- Armored Hearts
- As Twilight Falls
- Ascendancy of the Last
- Asgoleth the Warrior
- Attica
- Avenger (A Halflings Novel)
- Awakened (Vampire Awakenings)
- Awakening the Fire
- Balance (The Divine Book One)
- Becoming Sarah
- Before (The Sensitives)
- Belka, Why Don't You Bark
- Betrayal
- Better off Dead A Lucy Hart, Deathdealer
- Between
- Between the Lives
- Beyond Here Lies Nothing
- Bird
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- Black Feathers
- Black Halo
- Black Moon Beginnings
- Blade Song
- Bless The Beauty
- Blind God's Bluff A Billy Fox Novel
- Blood for Wolves
- Blood Moon (Silver Moon, #3)
- Blood of Aenarion
- Blood Past
- Blood Secrets
- Bloodlust
- Blue Violet
- Bonded by Blood
- Bound by Prophecy (Descendants Series)
- Break Out
- Brilliant Devices
- Broken Wings (An Angel Eyes Novel)
- Broods Of Fenrir
- Burden of the Soul
- Burn Bright
- By the Sword
- Cannot Unite (Vampire Assassin League)
- Caradoc of the North Wind
- Cast into Doubt
- Cause of Death: Unnatural
- Celestial Beginnings (Nephilim Series)
- City of Ruins
- Club Dead
- Complete El Borak
- Conspiracies (Mercedes Lackey)
- Cursed Bones
- That Which Bites
- Damned
- Damon
- Dark Magic (The Chronicles of Arandal)
- Dark of the Moon
- Dark_Serpent
- Dark Wolf (Spirit Wild)
- Darker (Alexa O'Brien Huntress Book 6)
- Darkness Haunts
- Dead Ever After