The dizziness went away, but behind his closed eyes he could still see the gorilla, still see the expressionless face and the all-too-expressive eyes. Eyes peering up from the pile of dirty straw in the pit, eyes clouding with pain and hopeless resignation as the chains and the cane flicked across the hairy shoulders.
Ought to be a law, Dave thought. There must be some kind of law to stop it, treating a poor dumb animal like that. And the old guy, Captain Ryder — there ought to be a law for an animal like him, too.
Ah, to hell with it. Better shut it out of his mind now, get some rest. Another couple of minutes wouldn't hurt—
It was the thunder that finally woke him. The thunder jerked him into awareness, and then he felt the warm, heavy drops pelting his head and face.
Dave rose and the wind swept over him, whistling across the fields. He must have been asleep for hours, because everything was pitch-black, and when he glanced behind him the lights of the carnival were gone.
For an instant the sky turned silver and he could see the rain pour down. See it, hell — he could feel it, and then the thunder came again, giving him the message. This wasn't just a summer shower, it was a real storm. Another minute and he was going to be soaking wet. By the time he got up to the state highway he could drown, and there wouldn't be a lift there for him, either. Nobody traveled in this kind of weather.
Dave zipped up his jacket, pulled the collar around his neck. It didn't help, and neither did walking up the road, but he might as well get going. The wind was at his back and that helped a little, but moving against the rain was like walking through a wall of water.
Another flicker of lightning, another rumble of thunder. And then the flickering and the rumbling merged and held steady; the light grew brighter and the sound rose over the hiss of wind and rain.
Dave glanced back over his shoulder and saw the source. The headlights and engine of a truck coming along the road from behind him. As it moved closer Dave realized it wasn't a truck; it was a camper, one of those two-decker jobs with a driver's cab up front.
Right now he didn't give a damn what it was as long as it stopped and picked him up. As the camper came alongside of him Dave stepped out, waving his arms.
The camper slowed, halted. The shadowy silhouette in the cab leaned over from behind the wheel and a hand pushed the window vent open on the passenger side.
"Want a lift, buddy?"
Dave nodded.
"Get in."
The door swung open and Dave climbed up into the cab. He slid across the seat and pulled the door shut behind him.
The camper started to move again.
"Shut the window," the driver said. "Rain's blowing in."
Dave closed it, then wished he hadn't. The air inside the cab was heavy with odors — not just perspiration, but something else. Dave recognized the smell even before the driver produced the bottle from his jacket pocket.
"Want a slug?"
Dave shook his head.
"Fresh corn likker. Tastes like hell, but it's better'n nothing."
"No, thanks."
"Suit yourself." The bottle tilted and gurgled. Lightning flared across the roadway ahead, glinting across the glass of the windshield, the glass of the upturned bottle. In its momentary glare Dave caught a glimpse of the driver's face, and the flash of lightning brought a flash of recognition.
The driver was Captain Ryder.
Thunder growled, prowling the sky, and the heavy camper turned onto the slick, rain-swept surface of the state highway.
"— what's the matter, you deaf or something? I asked you where you're heading."
Dave came to with a start.
"Oklahoma City," he said.
"You hit the jackpot. That's where I'm going."
Some jackpot. Dave had been thinking about the old guy, remembering the gorilla in the pit. He hated this bastard's guts, and the idea of riding with him all the way to Oklahoma City made his stomach churn all over again. On the other hand it wouldn't help his stomach any if he got set down in a storm here in the middle of the prairie, so what the hell. One quick look at the rain made up his mind for him.
The camper lurched and Ryder fought the wheel.
"Boy — sure is a cutter!"
Dave nodded.
"Get these things often around here?"
"I wouldn't know," Dave said. "This is my first time through. I'm meeting a friend in Oklahoma City. We figure on driving out to Hollywood together—"
"Hollywood?" The hoarse voice deepened. "That goddamn place!"
"But don't you come from there?"
Ryder glanced up quickly and lightning flickered across his sudden frown. Seeing him this close, Dave realized he wasn't so old; something besides time had shaped that scowl, etched the bitter lines around eyes and mouth.
"Who told you that?" Ryder said.
"I was at the carnival tonight. I saw your show."
Ryder grunted and his eyes tracked the road ahead through the twin pendulums of the windshield wipers. "Pretty lousy, huh?"
Dave started to nod, then caught himself. No sense starting anything. "That gorilla of yours looked like it might be sick."
"Bobo? He's all right. Just the weather. We open up north, he'll be fine." Ryder nodded in the direction of the camper bulking behind him. "Haven't heard a peep out of him since we started."
"He's traveling with you?"
"Whaddya think, I ship him airmail?" A hand rose from the wheel, gesturing. "This camper's built special. I got the upstairs, he's down below. I keep the back open so's he gets some air, but no problem — I got it all barred. Take a look through that window behind you."
Dave turned and peered through the wire-meshed window at the rear of the cab. He could see the lighted interior of the camper's upper level, neatly and normally outfitted for occupancy. Shifting his gaze, he stared into the darkness below. Lashed securely to the side walls were the tent, the platform boards, the banners, and the rigging; the floor space between them was covered with straw, heaped into a sort of nest. Crouched against the barred opening at the far end was the black bulk of the gorilla, back turned as it faced the road to the rear, intent on the roaring rain. The camper went into a skid for a moment and the beast twitched, jerking its head around so that Dave caught a glimpse of its glazed eyes. It seemed to whimper softly, but because of the thunder Dave couldn't be sure.
"Snug as a bug," Ryder said. "And so are we." He had the bottle out again, deftly uncorking it with one hand.
"Sure you don't want a belt?"
"I'll pass," Dave said.
The bottle raised, then paused. "Hey, wait a minute." Ryder was scowling at him again. "You're not on something else, are you, buddy?"
"Drugs?" Dave shook his head. "Not me."
"Good thing you're not." The bottle tilted, lowered again as Ryder corked it. "I hate that crap. Drugs. Drugs and hippies. Hollywood's full of both. You take my advice, you keep away from there. No place for a kid, not any more." He belched loudly, started to put the bottle back into his jacket pocket, then uncorked it again.
Watching him drink, Dave realized he was getting loaded. Best thing to do would be to keep him talking, take his mind off the bottle before he knocked the camper off the road.
"No kidding, were you really a Hollywood stunt man?" Dave said.
"Sure, one of the best. But that was back in the old days, before the place went to hell. Worked for all the majors — trick riding, fancy falls, doubling fight scenes, the works. You ask anybody who knows, they'll tell you old Cap Ryder was right up there with Yakima Canutt, maybe even better." The voice rasped on, harsh with pride. "Seven-fifty a day, that's what I drew. Seven hundred and fifty, every day I worked. And I worked a lot."
"I didn't know they paid that kind of dough," Dave told him.