Carl Hiaasen – Sick Puppy

“Yah.”

“Next time, don’t call at such a wicked hour. I’ve got ladies here.”

“Oh.”

“That’s ladies, plural.” Clapley, with a suggestive chuckle.

“Again, sir, my apologies. But ve can hope for no more surprises? That vood be good.”

“Oh, that vood be vunderful,” chided Robert Clapley, perceiving starch in the young banker’s tone, and not liking it. “Now it’s time to say good-bye. Somebody’s knocking at the door.”

“Ah. Perhaps one of your ladies plural.”

“Good night, again, Rolf.”

Clapley put on a silk robe that almost matched his pajamas. He hurried to the peephole and let out a burble of glee. Palmer Stoat!

Clapley snatched open the door. “You got my rhino dust!”

“No, Bob. Something better.”

As Stoat walked past him, Clapley inhaled a foul wave of heat, halitosis and perspiration. The lobbyist looked awful; blotchy and damp-skinned, a nasty purple bruise shining on his head.

“It’s about Toad Island,” he said, trudging uninvited toward the kitchen. “Where are the future twins?”

“Mass,” said Clapley.

“What for—to show off their kneeling?” Stoat was wheezing as if he’d walked all sixteen flights. “By the way, I lined up your cheetah hunt.”

“Swell. But what I need right now, more than oxygen, is the horn off a dead rhinoceros.”

Palmer Stoat waved a sticky-looking palm. “It’s in the works, Bob. On my mother’s grave. But that’s not what I came here to tell you.” He removed a carton of orange juice from the refrigerator and a bottle of Absolut from the liquor cabinet. He fixed himself an extremely tall screwdriver and told Robert Clapley all that had happened to him in the clutches of the maniac dognapper.

“Plus, now he’s brainwashed my wife. So here’s what I did, Bob. Here’s your big news. I advised this fucker—whose name is Twilly, by the way—I told him to keep Desie, keep the damn dog and quit wasting our time. The bridge is going up, I told him. Toad Island’s history. So fuck off!” Palmer Stoat smacked his liver-colored lips and smiled.

Clapley shrugged. “That’s it?”

Stoat’s piggy wet eyes narrowed. “Yes, Bob, and that’s plenty. No more extortion. The guy’s got nothing I care about. He can’t stop us and he can’t hurt us.”

“You’re only half-right,” said Clapley, “as usual.”

“No, Bob. He’s pathetic.”

“Really.”

“He doesn’t matter anymore.” Palmer Stoat made this a pronouncement. “He’s a gnat. He’s a no-place man.”

“That’s ‘nowhere man.’ ”

“What can he do to us now? What’s he got left?” Stoat gave a sickly grin. “He shot his wad, Bob.”

Robert Clapley was thinking how unwell Stoat looked. He was reminded of the day Stoat almost swallowed the baby rat.

“So what’re you saying, Palmer?”

“Onward and upward is what I’m saying.” Stoat tipped another shot of vodka into his drink. “From now on, it’s full speed ahead. You build your bridge and dig those pretty golf courses—me, I’m getting a divorce and a new dog.”

“You say this diseased cocksucker’s name isTwilly.”

“Forget about him, Bob. He’s Desie’s headache now.”

Clapley frowned. “No, Palmer, I can’t forget about him. He went to a lot of trouble to make his point with you. I expect he’s not done screwing with Shearwater yet.”

“For God’s sake, what’s he gonna do—throw himself in front of the bulldozers? Let him be,” Stoat said. “It’s over, Bob. Call off Mr. Gash and send him back to Liquid, or what-ever-the-hell club you found him at.”

“I’m afraid that’s not possible.”

Stoat gingerly pressed the chilled tumbler of vodka to the knot on his head. “Meaning you don’t want to, right?”

“Meaning it’s not possible, Palmer. Even if I did want to,” Clapley said. “Mr. Gash isn’t communicating with me at the moment. He gets these moods.”

Palmer Stoat shut his eyes. Down one pallid cheek rolled a single clear droplet from the vodka glass. “Would he hurt Desie?”

“Under certain conditions, sure,” Clapley said. “Hell, you met the man. He’s a primitive. Take a hot shower, Palmer, you’ll feel better. Later we’ll go look for the twins.”

All night he waited in vain for the Buick station wagon. He was parked in a grove of pines not far from Mrs. Stinson’s bed-and-break-fast. Playing over and over in the tape deck was one of his most prized 911s—a private bootleg not for sale anywhere at any price, not even on the Internet. Mr. Gash had learned of the recording one afternoon while hanging in his custom iguana-skin sex harness from the rafters of his air-conditioned South Beach apartment. One of the three women in bed below him fortuitously turned out to be a police dispatcher trainee from Winnipeg, Canada, who had a friend who had a friend who worked fire rescue in Duluth, Minnesota, where the bizarre incident was rumored to have occurred.

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