Well, with all due respect, I'd like to resign my membership.
Sorry. It's a lifetime commitment.
Go to hell, Mr. Chairman.
I’m already there, Brother. And so are you.
DeWalt braced himself for the agony of rising, stiffening from the car crash. "Hold on, Chester. I'm coming, if I can get my legs to work."
He rattled down the stairs, feeling as old as Methuselah. He was huffing by the time he caught up. "What do we do when we get there?"
Chester smiled, the late afternoon light making shadows in the valleys of his face. "Daddy always told me to make hay while the sun shines, pardner," he said, leading the way across the fields. "Didn't say nothing about what to do in the dark."
"Look at this fucking rot, man.” Junior stomped the planks of Don Oscar's porch and moldy dust rose in the air around them. The porch was covered with a blue powdery fungus that was about an inch deep. The mold reminded Junior of the blue mold that tainted the tobacco that his grandfather used to grow, back before the old coot had gotten so lazy.
"Where's Don Oscar?" Wade asked, a little uneasy at messing around a bootlegger's house with no one home.
"Probably up the trail doing business. See those cars in the driveway? That Mazda ain't Don Oscar's, it must be some customer."
"No, that's the preacher's wife's car."
"The preacher's wife? How in the hell do you know what she drives?"
Wade looked down. "’Cause I go to the Baptist Church."
Junior let out a chortle. "You're fucking with me."
"Naw, man."
Junior looked at Wade with his head tilted. Maybe the guy was serious. He was from up north, after all. "Hey, how do you reckon getting wasted works in with religion?"
"What's that got to do with believing in Jesus?"
Junior thought it over for a second, until his head started hurting. "Uh, nothing, I guess."
Wade crinkled his nose against the ripe, rank odor. "Shoo. That damned wife of Don Oscar's needs to do some cleaning."
"What is this shit?" Junior said, drawing a trail on the moldy porch with the tip of his boot.
"Who knows? Let's get our moonshine and get the hell out of Dodge."
Junior led the way up the dark muddy stitch of ground that followed the creek. There was more mold along its banks, veins of faded avocado green and powder blue and dried mustard. Puffballs dotted the dead leaves under the trees like leather eggs. The glen smelled like a forgotten laundry basement.
Wade stopped and looked along the creek. "Hey, Junior, is it my imagination, or is all this grass dying?"
"Who the fuck are you, Ranger Rick or something? Let's get up to the springhouse."
But Wade was right. All the plants seemed to be wilted, as if tapped out by a late frost. The trees sagged toward the ground, already tired from holding up new leaves. Some had fallen, their trunks snapped in half, branches stunted. But Windshake hadn’t had an ice storm in weeks. The plants were supposed to be thriving this time of year.
Junior and Wade stepped from under the oak and hickory and balsam limbs into the springhouse clearing. The mold in the clearing seemed to have dried out from exposure to the sun. Junior lifted the heavy padlock on the springhouse door to make sure it was locked.
"Hey, Don Oscar?" he yelled, his eyes searching the edge of the clearing. "You out here?"
"Maybe he's on vacation, man."
Junior giggled at the image of Don Oscar in Bermuda shorts, sitting on the deck of an ocean liner with his shirt off, his Indian-red neck and arms meeting the pale gooseflesh of his bare chest in the perfect outline of a T-shirt. "Naw, man. Bootleggers don't go on vacation. You saw the cars in the driveway."
"Do you want to wait a while, or what?" Wade looked around uncertainly.
"Why not? Good a place as any to smoke a little number." They sat on a fallen log and replenished their buzz, blowing smoke pillars into the clear sky. Junior saw that the stovepipes were bare mouthed, meaning Don Oscar had let his cooking fire die out. That wasn't like the old bootlegger at all. He liked to brag that he kept the still cooking around the clock.
And thin powdery roots had crawled up the walls of the springhouse, veining out across the warped planks. Don Oscar usually took a lot of pride in his operation.
"Hey, look at that," Wade said, pointing into the shadowed pocket of a soggy stump.
"Just some mushrooms. Sons of bitches grow all over the mountains this time of year.”
"But those are the psychedelic kind. Used to pick them out of the cow pastures down in Florida, when we went for vacation. Hippies down there showed me which ones were the right kind. Pop a few, and a half-hour later, you're as fucked as a Homecoming cheerleader."
"I got news for you, Ranger Rick. In case you ain't noticed, this ain't fucking Florida."
"I heard they grew in the North Carolina mountains, too."
"Since when did you turn into a goddamned nature boy? As I remember it, you're making an ‘F’ in Science, same as me.”
"If it's got something to do with getting fucked up, then I'm an expert. Like peyote and acid and stuff. You ever tripped, man?"
Junior's stoned smile was plastered across his face. His cheeks tingled. He shook his head from side to side. That Panama Red was some ass-kicking shit. No wonder those spics just wanted to lay in the shade all day.
And what the hell was Wade doing, going over and picking some fucking mushrooms when they had a pocketful of pot, and maybe some moonshine in the near future as well?
Wade sat back down and broke the moist splintery stem of one of the mushrooms. "See, if the stem turns blue where it's broken, that means it's a magic mushroom, or ‘shroom,’ as the hippies call it."
"You're full of shit, Wade."
"Hell, no, I'm not. We had hippies up north, too. Some of my best connections were hippies. Once you get past that peace and love horseshit, they're just like regular folks. And they know a hell of a lot about getting wasted."
"Give me a joint and a jar, and I'm set. I don't know about that other stuff. Plus, what if it's one of the poison kind, death angels or whatnot?"
"Look here. The stem's turning. It's safe as mother's milk."
Junior looked dubiously at the stem, at the blue-green ring that was starting to emerge where Wade had broken the flesh of the fungus. Junior was starting to get thirsty. Where the hell is Don Oscar?
"You ain't seriously going to eat that shit, are you?" Junior asked. But from the look in Wade's eyes, he didn't have to bother asking. Wade popped a couple of small caps in his mouth as if they were M amp;M's. Wade chewed and grimaced, then swallowed with effort.
He smiled at Junior, and it was a preacher smile, the kind people wore during weddings and holidays, or funerals where they didn't know the dead person too well. Wade held out his palm, and a couple of tan moist mushrooms lay across his lifelines.
"Magical Mystery Tour," Wade said, grimacing as if he had eaten a handful of earthworms.
"I don't know. I want to see if you drop over dead first."
"See you in the clouds, Chickenshit." Wade leaned back against the crisp, leaf-covered bank, oblivious to the moldering roots that threaded across the soil. "I'll say hello to God for you."
Junior was curious now. He hated missing out on a chance to escape from this fuck-up of a reality. What was the worst thing that could happen?
It was almost as if Wade read his mind, because Wade said, "What's the worst thing that can happen?"
"I'll die."
"Well, there's grass in heaven and there's booze in hell, so what have you got to lose?"
"Not a damn thing, I reckon."
He picked up the mushrooms that Wade had left on the log. They were light and innocent-looking. They couldn't be any worse for you than pot. His dad said that nature was there for a reason, and nature always did you right.