Chomp j-4 Read online




  Chomp

  ( Juvenile - 4 )

  Carl Hiaasen

  Carl Hiaasen

  Chomp

  ONE

  Mickey Cray had been out of work ever since a dead iguana fell from a palm tree and hit him on the head.

  The iguana, which had died during a hard freeze, was stiff as a board and weighed seven and a half pounds. Mickey’s son had measured the lifeless lizard on a fishing scale, then packed it on ice with the turtle veggies, in the cooler behind the garage.

  This was after the ambulance had hauled Mickey off to the hospital, where the doctors said he had a serious concussion and ordered him to take it easy.

  And to everyone’s surprise, Mickey did take it easy. That’s because the injury left him with double vision and terrible headaches. He lost his appetite and dropped nineteen pounds and lay around on the couch all day, watching nature programs on television.

  “I’ll never be the same,” he told his son.

  “Knock it off, Pop,” said Wahoo, Mickey’s boy.

  Mickey had named him after Wahoo McDaniel, a professional wrestler who’d once played linebacker for the Dolphins. Mickey’s son often wished he’d been called Mickey Jr. or Joe or even Rupert-anything but Wahoo, which was also a species of saltwater fish.

  It was a name that was hard to live up to. People naturally expected somebody called Wahoo to act loud and crazy, but that wasn’t Wahoo’s style. Apparently nothing could be done about the name until he was all grown up, at which point he intended to go to the Cutler Ridge courthouse and tell a judge he wanted to be called something normal.

  “Pop, you’re gonna be okay,” Wahoo would tell his father every morning. “Just hang in there.”

  Looking up with hound-dog eyes from the couch, Mickey Cray would say, “Whatever happens, I’m glad we ate that bleeping lizard.”

  On the day his dad had come home from the hospital, Wahoo had defrosted the dead iguana and made a peppercorn stew, which his mom had wisely refused to touch. Mickey had insisted that eating the critter that had dented his skull would be a spiritual remedy. “Big medicine,” he’d predicted.

  But the iguana had tasted awful, and Mickey Cray’s headaches only got worse. Wahoo’s mother was so concerned that she wanted Mickey to see a brain specialist in Miami, but Mickey refused to go.

  Meanwhile, people kept calling up with new jobs, and Wahoo was forced to send them to other wranglers. His father was in no condition to work.

  After school, Wahoo would feed the animals and clean out the pens and cages. The backyard was literally a zoo-gators, snakes, parrots, mynah birds, rats, mice, monkeys, raccoons, tortoises and even a bald eagle, which Mickey had raised from a fledgling after its mother was killed.

  “Treat ’em like royalty,” Mickey would instruct Wahoo, because the animals were quite valuable. Without them, Mickey would be unemployed.

  It disturbed Wahoo to see his father so ill because Mickey was the toughest guy he’d ever known.

  One morning, with summer approaching, Wahoo’s mother took him aside and told him that the family’s savings account was almost drained. “I’m going to China,” she said.

  Wahoo nodded, like it was no big deal.

  “For two months,” she said.

  “That’s a long time,” said Wahoo.

  “Sorry, big guy, but we really need the money.”

  Wahoo’s mother taught Mandarin Chinese, an extremely difficult language. Big American companies that had offices in China would hire Mrs. Cray to tutor their top executives, but usually these companies flew their employees to South Florida for Mrs. Cray’s lessons.

  “This time they want me to go to Shanghai,” she explained to her son. “They have, like, fifty people over there who learned Mandarin from some cheap audiotape. The other day, one of the big shots was trying to say ‘Nice shoes!’ and he accidentally told a government minister that his face looked like a butt wart. Not good.”

  “Did you tell Pop you’re going?”

  “That’s next.”

  Wahoo slipped outside to clean Alice’s pond. Alice the alligator was one of Mickey Cray’s stars. She was twelve feet long and as tame as a guppy, but she looked truly ferocious. Over the years Alice had appeared often in front of a camera. Her credits included nine feature films, two National Geographic documentaries, a three-part Disney special about the Everglades and a TV commercial for a fancy French skin lotion.

  She lay sunning on the mudbank while Wahoo skimmed the dead leaves and sticks from the water. Her eyes were closed, but Wahoo knew she was listening.

  “Hungry, girl?” he asked.

  The gator’s mouth opened wide, the inside as white as spun cotton. Some of her teeth were snaggled and chipped. The tips were green from pond algae.

  “You forgot to floss,” Wahoo said.

  Alice hissed. He went to get her some food. When she heard the squeaking of the wheelbarrow, she cracked her eyelids and turned her huge armored head.

  Wahoo tossed a whole plucked chicken into the alligator’s gaping jaws. The sound of her crunching on the thawed bird obscured the voices coming from the house-Wahoo’s mother and father “discussing” the China trip.

  Wahoo fed Alice two more dead chickens, locked the gate to the pond and took a walk. When he returned, his father was upright on the sofa and his mother was in the kitchen fixing bologna sandwiches for lunch.

  “You believe this?” Mickey said to Wahoo. “She’s bugging out on us!”

  “Pop, we’re broke.”

  Mickey’s shoulders slumped. “Not that broke.”

  “You want the animals to starve?” Wahoo asked.

  They ate their sandwiches barely speaking a word. When they were done, Mrs. Cray stood up and said: “I’m going to miss you guys. I wish I didn’t have to go.”

  Then she went into the bedroom and shut the door.

  Mickey seemed dazed. “I used to like iguanas.”

  “We’ll be okay.”

  “My head hurts.”

  “Take your medicine,” said Wahoo.

  “I threw it away.”

  “What?”

  “Those yellow pills, they made me constipated.”

  Wahoo shook his head. “Unbelievable.”

  “Seriously. I haven’t had a satisfactory bowel movement since Easter.”

  “Thanks for sharing,” said Wahoo. He started loading the dishwasher, trying to keep his mind off the fact that his mom was about to fly away to the far side of the world.

  Mickey got up and apologized to his son.

  “I’m just being selfish. I don’t want her to go.”

  “Me neither.”

  The following Sunday, they all rose before dawn. Wahoo lugged his mother’s suitcases to the waiting taxi. She had tears in her eyes when she kissed him goodbye.

  “Take care of your dad,” she whispered.

  Then, to Mickey, she said: “I want you to get better. That’s an order, mister.”

  Watching the cab speed off, Wahoo’s father looked forlorn. “It’s like she’s leaving us twice,” he remarked.

  “What are you talking about, Pop?”

  “I’m seein’ double, remember? There she goes-and there she goes again.”

  Wahoo was in no mood for that. “You want eggs for breakfast?”

  Afterward he went out in the backyard to deal with a troublesome howler monkey named Jocko, who’d picked the lock on his cage and was now leaping around, pestering the parrots and macaws. Wahoo had to be careful because Jocko was mean. He used a tangerine to lure the surly primate back to his cage, but Jocko still managed to sink a dirty fang into one of Wahoo’s hands.

  “I told you to wear the canvas gloves,” scolded Mickey when Wahoo was standing at the sink, cleaning the wound.

  “
You don’t wear gloves,” Wahoo pointed out.

  “Yeah, but I don’t get chomped like you do.”

  That was hogwash. Mickey got chomped all the time; it was an occupational hazard. His hands were so scarred that they looked fake, like rubber Halloween props.

  The phone rang and Wahoo picked it up. His father weaved back to the couch and flipped through the TV stations until he found the Rain Forest Channel.

  “Who was it that called?” he asked when Wahoo came out of the kitchen.

  “Another job, Pop.”

  “You send ’em to Stiggy?”

  Jimmy Stigmore was an animal wrangler who had a ranch up in west Davie. Mickey Cray wasn’t crazy about Stiggy.

  “No, I didn’t,” Wahoo said.

  His father frowned. “Then who’d you send ’em to? Not Dander!”

  Donny Dander had lost his wildlife-importing license after he got caught smuggling thirty-eight rare tree frogs from South America. The frogs had been cleverly hidden in his underwear, but the adventure ended in embarrassment at the Miami airport when a customs officer noticed that Donny’s pants were cheeping.

  Wahoo said, “I didn’t send ’em to Dander, either. I didn’t send ’em anywhere.”

  “Okay. Now you lost me,” said Mickey Cray.

  “I said we’d take the job. I said we could start next week.”

  “Are you crazy, boy? Look at me, I can’t see straight, I can’t hardly walk, my skull’s ’bout to split open like a rotten pumpkin-”

  “Pop!”

  “What?”

  “I said we,” Wahoo reminded him. “You and I together.”

  “But what about school?”

  “Friday’s the last day. Then I’m done for the summer.”

  “Already?” Wahoo’s dad didn’t keep up with Wahoo’s academic schedule as closely as his mother did. “So who called about the job?”

  Wahoo told him the name of the TV show.

  “Not him!” Mickey Cray snorted. “I’ve heard stories about that jerk.”

  “Well, how does a thousand bucks sound?” Wahoo asked.

  “Pretty darned sweet.”

  “That’s one thousand a day.” Wahoo let that sink in. “If you want, I’ll call ’em back and give him Stiggy’s number.”

  “Don’t be a knucklehead.” Wahoo’s father rose off the sofa and gave him a hug. “You did good, son. We’ll make this work.”

  “Absolutely,” said Wahoo, trying to sound confident.

  TWO

  Hundreds of iguanas had died and tumbled from the treetops during the big freeze in southern Florida. As far as Wahoo knew, his dad was the only person who’d been seriously hurt by one of the falling reptiles.

  Mickey Cray had been standing with a cup of hot cocoa beneath a coconut palm in the backyard when the dead lizard had knocked him stiff. Later, after he was brought home from the hospital, Mickey had ordered Wahoo to search the property, capture any iguanas that had survived the frigid weather and relocate them to an abandoned orchid farm half a mile away.

  Wahoo hadn’t searched very hard. It wasn’t the fault of the iguanas that they’d frozen to death. They weren’t meant to be living so far north, but Miami pet dealers had been importing baby specimens from the tropics for decades. The customers who bought them had no idea they would grow six feet long, eat all the flowers in the garden and then leap into the swimming pool to poop. When that rude reality set in, the unhappy owners would drive their pet lizards to the nearest park and set them free. Before long, South Florida was crawling with hordes of big wild iguanas that were producing hordes of little wild iguanas.

  The cold snap had put an end to that, at least temporarily.

  On the first morning of summer vacation, Wahoo found his father in the backyard scanning the trees.

  “See any, Pop?”

  “All clear,” Mickey Cray reported.

  Although months had passed since the accident, he was still paranoid about getting clobbered with another falling lizard.

  “You must be feeling better,” Wahoo remarked. He was pleased to see his dad up and moving around so early.

  “My headache’s gone!” Mickey announced.

  Wahoo said, “No way.”

  “All those pills the doctors made me swallow, they didn’t do a darn thing. Then all of a sudden I wake up and, boom, it’s like a miracle.” Mickey shrugged. “Some things just can’t be explained, son.”

  But Wahoo had a theory that his father had been cured by five simple words: one thousand dollars a day.

  Mickey said, “Go fetch some lettuce for Gary and Gail.”

  Gary and Gail were two ancient Galapagos tortoises that Wahoo’s dad had purchased from a zoo in Sarasota many years earlier, when he was new to the wildlife business. These days there wasn’t much demand from the TV nature shows for Gary and Gail, because tortoises were not exactly dynamic performers. Mickey Cray kept them around mainly for sentimental reasons. Each of the animals was more than a century old, and he didn’t trust any of the other wranglers to treat them properly. The night before the big freeze, Mickey had gone out back and carefully cloaked Gail and Gary with heavy quilts so they wouldn’t die. Wahoo had watched from his bedroom window.

  “I don’t suppose he’s interested in these two,” Mickey muttered while the tortoises munched loudly on their lettuce.

  “No, they said he wants Alice,” said Wahoo, “and a major python.”

  They were talking about their famous new client, Derek Badger. He was the star of Expedition Survival! one of the most popular shows on cable. Every week, Derek would parachute into some gnarly wilderness teeming with fierce animals, venomous snakes and disease-carrying insects. Armed with only a Swiss army knife and a straw, he would hike, climb, crawl, paddle or swim back to civilization-or until he was “rescued.” Along the way, he’d eat bugs, rodents, worms, even the fungus on tree bark-the grosser it looked, the happier Derek Badger was to stuff it into his cheeks.

  Wahoo and his dad had watched Expedition Survival! often enough to know that most of the wildlife scenes were faked. They were also aware that at no time was Derek’s life in actual danger, since he was always accompanied by a camera crew packing food, candy, sunblock, water, first-aid supplies and, most likely, a large gun.

  “Derek’s never done a show in the Everglades,” Wahoo said to his father.

  “They say he’s a humongous pain in the butt, this guy.”

  “Just be nice, Pop. It’s a lot of money.”

  Mickey promised to behave. “So, when do we get to meet the man himself?”

  “His assistant is supposed to stop by later.”

  “What kind of python do they want-Burmese? African rock?”

  Wahoo said, “Honestly, I don’t think it matters.”

  They set to work building a pen for a young bobcat that was being delivered from a ranch up in Highlands County. The cat had been struck by a Jeep and suffered a broken leg that wouldn’t mend, so it could never be released back into the wild. Mickey Cray had agreed to raise the animal, and he hoped to make it tame enough for TV work.

  Bobcats were strong, meaning the pen had to be sturdy. Wahoo knew that a person with double vision shouldn’t be using a nail gun, so he put his dad in charge of measuring and cutting the chicken wire. By noon Mickey’s headache came roaring back, and he was in misery. Wahoo steered him to the house and made him lie on the couch and fed him four aspirins.

  Minutes later, somebody started knocking on the front door. Mickey raised up and said, “That’s probably the guy with the bobcat.”

  Wahoo looked out the window and saw a woman with a shining stack of red hair. She wore tan shorts and jeweled sandals, and she was carrying a leather briefcase.

  “No cat,” he said to his father.

  “Well, open the darn door.”

  “But what if she’s from the bank?” Wahoo whispered. The Crays were months behind on their mortgage payments.

  Mickey peeked out the window. “She is definitely
not from the bank.”

  Wahoo invited the woman inside. She introduced herself as Raven Stark.

  “I’m Derek Badger’s production assistant,” she said. “I brought your contract.”

  “Excellent,” said Mickey.

  Wahoo noticed that Raven Stark had a strong accent. He tried not to stare at her hairdo, which looked like a sculpture made of red chrome.

  She asked, “May I take a look around?”

  “Nope,” said Wahoo’s father.

  Raven Stark seemed surprised.

  “First you’ve got to sign a release form,” Mickey said. “I don’t want to get sued if you fall into the gator pond and get bit.”

  She laughed. “I’ve been doing this a long time, Mr. Cray.”

  “You sign the release, my son will be happy to give you the grand tour.”

  A few years earlier, Mickey Cray had invited Wahoo’s elementary school class to come see his wild animals. A boy named Tingley had ignored Wahoo’s warning and reached into one of the cages to tug the tail of a grumpy raccoon, which had spun around and clawed the kid’s arm so badly that it looked like a road map of Hialeah. Mickey paid for Tingley’s doctor bills, though not before telling his parents that their boy was dumb as a box of rocks. Ever since then, Mickey’s insurance company insisted that everyone who came on the property had to fill out a legal form saying it wasn’t Mickey’s fault if they got hurt.

  While Raven Stark signed the release, Mickey signed the contract from Expedition Survival! Wahoo noticed that he scrawled his name crookedly below the line where it was supposed to go, which meant his eyesight was still jumbled.

  “How long is the shoot going to take?” Mickey asked.

  Raven Stark said, “Until we get it right.”

  Wahoo’s dad looked pleased. “So it’s one thousand a day, plus location fees and the animal rentals.”

  “Correct.” She took an envelope from her purse and handed it to him. “Here’s eight hundred dollars as a deposit.”

  Mickey counted the cash and then turned to Wahoo. “Son, go show this fine lady whatever she wants to see.”