There were fourteen employees inside the modest quarters. All were on their backs trembling against the floor and watching his leap. Their minds were so blank with fright that not one even wanted him to slip. If he fell someone would be expected to struggle with him. It was a duty the $115-a-week guard was loath to face. He was rooting for the oddly attired stick-up man to get a million, if necessary, and to get out.
Vigal had attired himself with purposeful outrageousness. His hat was an over-puffed, knitted, red stocking flap. He wore a droopy turtle-necked sweater with long sleeves floridly brilliant in contrasting stripes, and his wide, checkered slacks clung to his ankles with heavy elastics. His shoes were green and lustrous, and there was a small drum tucked with its sticks by a narrow strap over his shoulders. It was a wild costume that dis-furnished the mind, but the weapon gripped tightly in his hand was a silencing menace that was respected by the white Establishment.
In the maze of colors his face became an anonymous blob. It was part of his plan. Who could ever correctly describe him after he escaped?
At 8:00 he had slipped out of an alley and jammed his gun into the bank guard’s back. “You belong to me, man,” he whispered and slashed the officer’s weapon from its holster. “Open the door!”
Once inside, Vigal supervised with dispatch all the normal activities that would throw off suspicion. The Venetians were thrust partially open, the fluorescent tubes over the tellers’ cages were lighted, and the guard was ordered to make his pacifying call to the bank patrol office. “It’s 8:07. Everything’s in order here—”
For a moment he had hoped to voice the distress signal which was “Okay,” but Vigal knew the routine too well. He tapped the man’s head with the nozzle of his gun. “Say, Maynard,” he ordered.
“Maynard,” the guard spouted and dropped the receiver into its cradle.
The manager was admitted and locked in at 8:30. He and the guard were immediately supplied with wooden pegs Vigal carried in his drum. They were fashioned to fit the alarm releases on the floors. Vigal had spent a week carving the preventatives. “One stupid finger slip and both, of you die,” he barked, and the pegs slid into perfect permanent position.
Each phone wire was severed at the wall, and the scanning cameras hidden in niches at both ends of the lounge were disconnected and their slugs crushed with a hammer.
“You seem to know where everything is,” the manager said dourly.
“Even the two hundred $1000 bills that are waiting for pick-up in your vault,” Vigal agreed. “And you’re going to help me leave with them.”
Then, with his gun holding command, Vigal extracted four slim cannisters from his drum. “Now listen, if you want to live. These were taken from an Army dump ship that buried thousands of them in the South Pacific. Don’t worry how I got them, but I’m giving them to you. Then you can worry real good because they contain a death gas that kills everything within 500 feet in less than two seconds. Two seconds, get that? Once they’re open, that becomes it, man.” He laughed with a sinister threatening sound.
“There’s a short-wave release on each can, and I can control it up to a mile from this room.” He pulled out a diminutive electronic device for its macabre effect. “I know I can trust you and your cashier to open the big safe with your counter-keys. Get me?”
The manager, rigid and tense, nodded affirmatively and shuddered as Vigal carefully placed his bombs on a desk. It was exactly 9:00 now and the cashier arrived. His morning jauntiness was shocked from his face as the manager hustled him downstairs into the vault zone.
The remaining employees were captured at the door as each appeared, and Vigal’s gun silenced them into flat immobility on the carpets. “I’m taking off the minute they come up with my money. Then you’ll all take your places as if nothing’s happened. Remember, I’ll be in charge here long after I’m gone.”
It was 9:46 when Vigal completed his leap across the counter. He breathed hard as he stuffed the cash into his drum. When he locked the door from the outside, everyone proceeded to his position like a robot.
Vigal walked slowly into the alley, then broke into a run for the two blocks to Market St. where the parade of the Black Compton Clowns for Racial Justice was passing on schedule. He lowered his drum in front of him and sidled in with the wide flank formation of drummers. Each was in a costume identical with his. He sighed. His job was done.
His security suddenly shattered when he realized the drummers were all white men. “Where’s our black corps?” he asked the man beside him.
“They’re on a plane to Washington. Duke Ellington hired ’em this morning for a special show at the White House.”
Vigal went limp as he saw police cars merging on the procession.
Pit of Fear
by Clayton Matthews
“Dead men rise up never?” That’s what the poem said. But my pal in the casket did just that every day — until the last day...
The man in the casket had none of the waxy pallor of death. There was color in his cheeks, the color of life. But his eyes were closed, the long-fingered hands folded peacefully across his chest. And the fluted, beak-like nostrils showed no signs of breathing.
A man and a woman stood looking down at the casket. They hadn’t seen me come in. It was late, after midnight, and the big carnival tent was empty except for the three of us. They were arguing about something as I stopped behind them. Their voices, even in contention, had a hushed, sepulchral quality in the big tent.
The woman said in a tense whisper, “Gil, I can’t! Carl will have to come out any minute, and he’s always angry if I’m not here.”
“You’d think I was asking you out on a date,” Gil Holt said bitterly, “instead of going to the cook tent for a lousy cup of coffee!”
Linda Mercer said, “But don’t you see, to Carl it’s the same thing!”
“No, I don’t see. All I can see is a beautiful broad married to a man twice her age!”
I cleared my throat loudly, and the pair spun around guiltily.
Gil Holt said, “Patch! We didn’t hear you come in.”
“Sorry, I didn’t mean to sneak up on you.” I nodded toward the man in the casket. “Carl all right?”
“Sure, he’s fine.” Holt’s glance swung toward the casket, and he took a step back. “Look, he’s watching us!”
The grave, if such it could be called, occupied a position of prominence in the sideshow tent, isolated by several feet from one end of the long platform running down the center. The area around the grave was chained off, a section of striped canvas hung from the chain, dragging the ground like a woman’s long skirt.
Actually the grave was little more than a rectangular pit, dug before the first performance of each new carnival date. The bottom two-thirds of the casket was covered with dirt, packed in tightly and mounded on top. The upper third was clear glass. It was set on a slight slant, giving the spectators on the entrance side of the pit an unobstructed view of the man inside. A heavy chain was wrapped around the lid, held in place by a large padlock.
The eyes of the man in the casket, deep black and strangely compelling, were wide open, staring up at us. His gaze was baleful, faintly menacing. His hands were still crossed over his chest, but now there was a barely perceptible rise and fall of the chest.
I saw Gil Holt shiver. “He always spooks me when I see him looking out of the damn coffin! Like a dead man come to life.”
Linda laughed mockingly. “That’s the name of the exhibit, Gil. ‘Buried Alive!’ ”