David Wong
THIS BOOK IS FULL OF SPIDERS
Seriously, Dude, Dont Touch It
For Carley, who was a better person than I am even though she was a dog
THE FOLLOWING ACCOUNT CONTAINS FRANK DESCRIPTIONS OF MONSTERS AND MALE NUDITY.
You know how sometimes when youre drifting off to sleep you feel that jolt, like you were falling and caught yourself at the last second? Its nothing to be concerned about, its usually just the parasite adjusting its grip.
I guess I should explain that a little further, but it will take a while. And you have to promise not to get mad. My name is David Wong, by the way. Its on the cover. If you dont know who I am, thats perfect. That means you didnt read the previous book in this saga which, to be frank, doesnt paint me in the best light. No, dont go read it now. Its better if we get a fresh start. So, hello, stranger! Im pleased to have this fresh opportunity to try to convince you Im not a shithead. Just skip the next paragraph.
* * *
If you do know who I am, presumably because you read the previous book, I know what youre thinking and in response I can only say, No, fuck you. Stop sending me hate mail. Please note that all correspondence regarding the class action lawsuit resulting from the publication of that book should be directed to the publishers legal department, not me. Go find the address yourself, you bunch of greedy fartsouls.
* * *
Now, on with our tale. Note: I apologize for the harsh language above, youll find that is not typical of me.
So heres how fucked up this town is. My friend John and I were out celebrating his birthday last summer. At the end of the night we were good and drunk and we headed outside of town to go climb up the water tower and piss off of it. This had been Johns tradition for the last twenty years (if you do the math, youll realize that goes back to when he turned five, which really says more about Johns parents than John). This was a special year because they were in the process of tearing down that old water tower to build a new, more modern one and it didnt look like the new one was going to have the kind of platform that you could piss off of, because this is no longer a world of men.
Anyway, its two in the morning and were taking turns pissing off of the tower (rather than going at the same time, because we werent raised by wolves). So its my turn and Im right at that transcendent moment when the long stream of urine connects me and the ground below, when I see headlights off in the distance. A row of them, out on the highway, about a quarter mile of cornfield away from where I was pissing. That was enough to get my attention, because that is not a busy stretch of highway at any hour, let alone in the wee hours of the morning on a weekday. As the headlights got closer, I saw they belonged to a row of black military transports.
I squinted and said, Are we being invaded? Because Im too drunk to pull off a Red Dawn.
From behind me, John said, Look at that one. In the back and my pissing immediately stopped because I sure as hell cant go while somebody is talking to me. I found the last set of headlights and saw that they were waving lazily back and forththe truck swerving out of control. Then, with a faint crunch, the vehicle connected with a telephone pole.
The rest of the convoy moved on without it.
Before I could even get zipped up, John was already climbing down the ladder, over my slurred protests. He managed to somehow not tumble off and break his neck, and jumped into my rusting old Ford Bronco. I followed him down and barely made it into the passenger seat before we were speeding down the lane, rows of corn whipping past, John with the Bronco in stealth mode with the headlights off.
We found the wrecked truck (which was built like one of the armored cars banks use, only minus any markings) off the side of the highway, its steaming grille looking like it was caught in the act of trying to eat the wooden pole. We were alone with itnone of the rest of the trucks had doubled back to check on the crash, a fact that at the time I was too intoxicated to find odd. We cautiously approached the vehicle. John went right to the drivers side door, I guess to see if the driver was hurt. He peered into the window, yanked the door open, then just stood there, in silence.
I said, What?
Nothing from John.
I glanced nervously down the highway and said again, What? Is he dead?
Again, no answer.
I approached and reluctantly peered into the drivers seat. Now it was my turn to stand there slackjawed, breathing air that stank of leaking antifreeze. My first impression was that the drivers seat was empty, which wouldnt have been that oddmaybe the driver was dazed and had stumbled out before we arrived. But it wasnt empty. Sitting in the drivers seat was a six-inch-tall plastic GI Joe action figure. It was half obscured by the seat belt, which was clasped around it.
John and I stood there trying to puzzle through what we were seeing, the gears in our heads creaking against a thick vodka sludge. Not that it would have made sense in perfect sobriety, eitherthe driver, what, crashed his truck into a tree, then before leaving the scene of the accident, decided to position a toy in the drivers seat and buckle the seat belt around it? Why? So the first responders would think the Toy Story universe was real?
John pulled the keys from the ignition and closed the door. He glanced around outside, looking for the driver. Nobody in sight. Then he circled around to the back of the truck, to the windowless, locked rear doors. He banged on the door with his fist and said, Hey, you guys all right in there? Looks like the accident turned the driver into a GI Joe.
No answer. If wed been sober, wed probably have realized that there was a great chance that if anybody was inside this sinister, black, unmarked armored vehicle, theyd more likely jump out with guns and kick the shit out of us than thank us for our concern. But that didnt happen, and John immediately went about figuring out which key on the key ring would open the door. After a dozen clumsy attempts, he found one that worked and slowly pulled it open.
No one was in the back of the truck.
Laying on the floor was a box. It was army olive green, and about the size of a toolbox, or a lunchbox for somebody who always got really hungry at work. It had a simple handle at the top. The sides were ribbed in a way that suggested it was reinforced or armored somehow. There was no visible latch or lock, and in fact there was no obvious place to try to wedge in a crowbar. Across the front, stenciled in yellow spray paint, were a series of markings that looked like Egyptian hieroglyphs.
John climbed into the truck and grabbed the box. I clumsily climbed in after him, banging my shin painfully off the bumper on the way, whispering, John! No! Leave it!
Inside, I realized that we werent alone. The mystery box was being guarded by six more GI Joe action figures, each carrying a little plastic assault rifle. They were wearing tiny black suits with face masks. I guess more Cobra than GI Joe, then.
John grabbed the box and jumped out into the night, oblivious to my slurred demands to leave it behind.
* * *
If youre asking yourself what exactly John expected to find inside that truck, the easy guess would be, a shitload of cash. But were not criminals, if we had found a pile of white bags with big cartoon dollar signs on them, wed have locked up the truck and called the cops. No, the answer is more complicated.