“Your Majesty, I’m not sure that I’m coming back myself, but I promise, if I find him, I’ll try to bring him out. Now if you’ll excuse me, I’m going to open this van and I don’t want you to be alarmed by what you see, but I want to get into the pipe while there’s still some light from the grates. What you see coming out of the van—they’re friends.”
“Carry on,” said the Emperor.
Charlie slid the door open and the squirrel people hopped, scampered, and scooted down the bank of the creek toward the culvert. Charlie reached into the van, took out his sword-cane and flashlight, and butt-bumped the door shut. Lazarus whimpered and looked at the Emperor as if someone who was able to talk should say something.
“Good luck, then, valiant Charlie,” said the Emperor. “You go forth with all of us in your heart, and you in ours.”
“You’ll watch the van?”
“Until the Golden Gate crumbles to dust, my friend,” said the Emperor.
And so Charlie Asher, in the service of life and light and all sentient beings, and in hope of rescuing the soul of the love of his life, led an army of fourteen-inch-tall bundles of animal bits, armed with everything from knitting needles to a spork, into the storm sewers of San Francisco.
They slogged on for hours—sometimes the pipes became narrow enough that Charlie had to crawl on his hands and knees, other times they opened into wide junctions like concrete rooms. He helped the squirrel people climb to higher pipes. He’d found a lightweight construction helmet fitted with an LED headlamp, which came in handy in narrow passages where he couldn’t aim the flashlight. He was also bumping his head about ten times an hour, and although the helmet protected him from injury, he’d developed a throbbing headache. His leathers—not really leathers, but more heavy nylon with Lexan pads at the knees, shoulders, elbows, shins, and forearms—were protecting him from bumps and abrasions on the pipes, but they were soaked and rubbing him raw at the backs of his knees. At an open junction with a grate at the top he climbed the ladder and tried to get a look at the neighborhood to perhaps get a sense of where they were, but it had gotten dark out since they started and the grate was under a parked car.
What irony, that he would finally summon his courage and charge into the breach, only to end up lost and stuck in the breach. A human misfire.
“Where the hell are we?” he said.
“No idea,” said the bobcat guy, the one who could talk.
The little Beefeater was disturbing to watch when he spoke, since he really didn’t have a face, only a skull, and he spoke without ever making the P sound. Also, instead of a halberd, which Charlie thought should have come with the costume for authenticity, the bobcat had armed himself with a spork.
“Can you ask the others if they know where we are?”
“Okay.” He turned to the damp gallery of squirrel people. “Hey, anybody know where we are?”
They all shook their heads, looking from one to another, shrugging. Nope.
“No,” said the bobcat.
“Well, I could have done that,” Charlie said.
“Why don’t you? It’s your _arty,” he said. Charlie realized he meant “party.”
“Why no Ps?” Charlie asked.
“No li_s.”
“Right, lips. Sorry. What are you going to do with that spork?”
“Well, when we find some bad guys, I’m going to s_ork the fuck out of them.”
“Excellent. You’re my lieutenant.”
“Because of the s_ork?”
“No, because you can talk. What’s your name?”
“Bob.”
“No really.”
“Really. It’s Bob.”
“So I suppose your last name is Cat.”
“Wilson.”
“Just checking. Sorry.”
“’S okay.”
“Do you remember who you were in your last life?”
“I remember a little. I think I was an accountant.”
“So, no military experience?”
“You need some bodies counted, I’m your man, er, thing.”
“Swell. Does anyone here remember if they used to be a soldier, or a ninja or anything? Extra credit for ninjas or a Viking or something. Weren’t any of you like Attila the Hun or Captain Horatio Hornblower in a former life or something?”
A ferret in a sequined minidress and go-go boots came forward, paw raised.
“You were a naval commander?”
The ferret appeared to whisper into Bob’s hat (since Bob no longer had ears).
“She says no, she misunderstood, she thought you meant horn blower.”
“She was a prostitute?”
“Cornet _layer,” said Bob.
“Sorry,” Charlie said. “It’s the boots.”
The ferret waved him off in a “no worries” way, then leaned over and whispered to Bob again.
“What?” Charlie said.
“Nothing,” Bob said.
“Not nothing. I didn’t think they could talk.”
“Well, not to you,” said Bob.
“What did she say?”
“She said we’re fucked.”
“Well, that’s not a very good attitude,” Charlie said, but he was starting to believe the go-go ferret was right, and he leaned back into a semisitting position in the pipe to rest.
Bob climbed up to a smaller pipe and sat on the edge, his feet dangling over; water dripped from his little patent-leather shoes, but the floral pattern brass buckles still shone in the light of Charlie’s headlamp.
“Nice shoes,” Charlie said.
“Yeah, well, Audrey digs me,” said Bob.
Before Charlie could answer, the dog had grabbed Bob from behind and was shaking him like a rag doll. His mighty spork clattered off the pipe and was lost in the water below.
27
BITCH’S BREW
Lily had been looking all night for a way to approach Minty Fresh. She’d made eye contact with him a dozen times over the course of the evening, and smiled, but with the atmosphere of dread that fell over the room she was having trouble thinking of an opening line. Finally, when an Oprah movie of the week came on the television and everyone gathered around to watch the media diva beat Paul Winfield to death with a steam iron, Minty went to the breakfast bar and started flipping through his day planner, and Lily made her move.
“So, checking your appointments?” she said. “You must be feeling optimistic about how things will go.”
He shook his head. “Not really.”
Lily was smitten. He was beautiful and morose—like a great brown man-gift from the gods.
“How bad can it be?” Lily said, pulling the appointment book out of his hand and flipping through the pages. She stopped on today’s date.
“Why is Asher’s name in here?” she asked.
Minty hung his head. “He said you’ve known all about us for a while.”
“Yeah, but—” She looked at the name again and the realization of what she was seeing was like a punch in the chest. “This is that book? This is your date book for that?”
Minty nodded slowly, not looking at her.
“When did this name show up?” Lily asked.
“It wasn’t there an hour ago.”
“Well, fucksocks,” she said, sitting down on the bar stool next to the big man.
“Yeah,” said Minty Fresh. He put his arm around her shoulders.
With Charlie pulling on the legs of the bobcat guy (who was doing some impressive screaming considering he had prototype vocal cords) and the squirrel people dog-piling onto the Boston terrier, they were eventually able to extricate their lieutenant from the jaws of the bug-eyed fury with only a few snags in his Beefeater’s costume.
“Down, Bummer,” Charlie said. “Just chill.” He didn’t know if chill was an official dog command, but it should be.
Bummer snorted and backed away from the surrounding crowd of squirrel people.
“Not one of us,” said the bobcat guy, pointing at Bummer. “Not one of us.”
“You shut up,” Charlie said. He pulled a beef jerky from his pocket that he’d brought for emergency rations, tore off a hunk, and held it out to Bummer. “Come on, buddy. I told the Emperor I’d look out for you.”