Authors: Gloria Miklowitz
“Hey, Klinger,” Billy said. “What's with the Superman routine? We were just having a little fun.” He opened the chip bag and dug into it.
“Yeah,” Tyler echoed. “She's just a retard!”
Mac leaned against the wall, silent.
“You guys are sick! She's just a little kid!” Kyle shouted at them. He tugged on Charley's fingers. “Let go of the fence, Charley. Verity's looking for you. That's the girl.” He put his jacket around Charlene's shoulders.
“Hey, Big-City Boy! Who you tellin' what to do!” Mac strode into the rain, threateningly close.
“Let's go, Charley!” Kyle pressed Charlene's back to hurry her away.
“Better watch it, Klinger,” Mac shouted after him, his words almost lost in the noise of the storm. He heard catcalls and laughter and realized, as he ran, that he'd done the unforgivable, taking Charley's side against them. They'd never forget.
“Hurry, Charley!”
“I lost my shoe! I gotta get my shoe!”
“We'll find it later.” He bent down. “Put your arms around my neck and your legs around my waist. That's it!” He lifted her and ran.
“Charlene!” Verity screamed, rushing to them through the rain. “Charlene!”
“I lost my shoe!”
“She's okay!” Kyle said, putting Charley down so she could run to her sister.
“Where was she? Oh, you goose! Why did you go off like that?” Verity grabbed Charley's hand and ran to cover.
The three of them stood under an awning, waiting for the rain to let up. Water gushed over the canopy above them, forming a curtain. Charley told Verity how the boys had followed her, cornered her, how they'd scared her until Kyle had come and saved her.
“Thanks,” Verity said, her blue eyes shining. “You're okay! Thanks a lot!”
Kyle shrugged, smiling. Though cold and wet, he felt as if the sun had just come out.
“So, darlin'? Did you have a good time?” Marie had gotten a ride to the swap meet and now was riding back with them, sitting between Kyle and his father.
Kyle stared out the window, watching the fluffy white clouds scud across the blue sky. He'd been thinking about Verity. She trusted him, maybe even liked him a little. When the rain had let up she'd left the carnival to find her father. But just before, she'd said, “If you still want me to show you how to fish, meet us at the bridge tomorrow.”
“So?” Marie twisted around to see Kyle better. “Aha! I know that look! I bet he met a girl!”
“Let him be, sweetheart,” Kyle's father said, tapping her knee. “He's got a right to some privacy.” But after a moment he asked, “So, Kyle, did you?”
“Yeah. Verity.” He didn't add her last name.
His father's smile faded but then he teased, “Yesterday, Marta. Today, Verity. My son, the lover boy.”
“Takes after his papa,” Marie said.
“How'd you make out at the swap meet?” Kyle asked, wanting to take the heat off himself. “Were you able to get the âbig stuff' you want?”
“Some.”
“Dad, what's
Operation Desperate
mean?”
The silence lasted so long that Kyle thought his father didn't want to answer, or wouldn't. But finally he said, “Where'd you hear that?”
“I heard you talking about âO. D.' I asked Hiram if he knew what it meant, and he said, âAsk your father.' Then I asked this girl, Verity, and she said, âSure. Operation Desperate. Everyone knows.'”
Marie and his father exchanged quick glances.
“It means . . .” His father paused and said, “You tell him, Marie.”
“It means,” Marie said, picking her words carefully, “that if the government oversteps its powers . . . It means,” she started again, “that if they go too farâthe militia will have to take action.”
“You mean, use guns and all? Against our own government?” Kyle's voice cracked. “Honest?”
“Honest.”
A jolt of electricity shot down Kyle's arms as he realized they were indeed serious. Not only that, but Verity's father, with the ATF, knew about it. He'd wanted to ignore the signsâweapons hidden in the barn, bivouacs, secret meetings, the illegal purchase of weapons. Or at least he'd figured nothing would really come of it. Now he had to accept that Dad and his friends were preparing for a real war! Against their own country! Kyle hugged himself, suddenly cold.
“When you say âdesperate,' how desperate do things have to get?” he asked in a shaky voice. “I mean, I can't imagine any situation bad enough to . . . to . . . do that.”
“We certainly hope you're right,” Marie said. “Isn't that so, Ed?”
His father didn't answer.
K
YLE TURNED
to the window, staring blindly at the green fields and cow pastures they passed. His father lit a cigarette, shutting himself off from further talk. Kyle recognized that kind of escape. It was a flaw he saw in himself. When he wanted to do something others might not approve of, he tuned them out and went ahead and did it anyway. His mother worried about that in him. “You're so like your father I could scream!” she'd cry. “You do just as you please, no matter what advice you get.” Maybe Brian was different. That would explain why his mother loved him.
He tried to cheer himself. As far as he knew, the militia had done nothing violent so far, so maybe his dad and the others were all talk. But
they weren't all talk;
he knew it. You don't keep acquiring more and bigger weapons without finding a reason to use them. Probably every weapon ever built got used.
He'd better keep alert. But even if he did learn of some planned action, what would he do about it? He crossed his arms over his chest, drew a deep breath, and tried to get his mind on something else. Verity. He'd think about her again.
“Gun club's meeting here tonight,” his father announced as soon as they drove off the main road toward the house. Prince barked an excited welcome, tail wagging his whole body, as the truck rolled to a stop.
Kyle opened the door and jumped down.
Great!
Maybe he'd get to use some of the different pistols and rifles he'd seen at the fair. Maybe he could try his skill against the experienced men. “Can I help?” he asked eagerly, skipping in front of his father and Marie as they reached the house.
“Sure. Set up chairs. Outdoors. You'll find them stacked against the wall in the barn. We'll be meeting first.”
“Why outdoors? There'll be hordes of mosquitoes.”
“Just do what I said.” His father dropped his cigarette to the ground and stomped it out with the toe of his boot. “Maybe you'll be a lawyer. You sure ask lots of questions.”
When they entered the house, Marie went off to the kitchen to fix supper and his father checked the blinking message machine. Kyle hung back, peeling a banana.
“Ed, it's Thad. Be a little late but I'll be there.”
“Roger here. Okay if I bring a guest tonight?”
“Hell, no!” his father roared, though the man on the answering machine couldn't hear. “He oughta know we got to check the guy out first!”
“Easy, Ed,” Marie called from the kitchen. “You know he wouldn't bring someone he couldn't trust.”
A woman's voice. “Kyle, honey? It's Sunday afternoon. Everything all right? How about a phone call?”
“I just talked to her yesterday!” Kyle complained.
Another female voice, low and enticing. “Mr. Klinger? Do you take girls in your gun club? I'm a real good shot. Honest.” A sexy giggle.
Kyle's eyes darted from his father to Marie.
“Doesn't give up easy, does she?” his father asked, frowning.
“That poor child!” Marie smiled.
And then Kyle heard the deep, resonant voice of Mr. Johnson. “Ed? Earl here. Call me soon as you can. I got trouble, bad trouble!”
“Didn't I ask you to set out the chairs?” his father said, picking up the receiver. “Go on! Skedaddle.” He held the phone, eyes on Kyle, waiting.
Kyle turned away reluctantly. His father didn't want him hearing whatever he had to say to Mr. Johnson. Come to think of it, his dad used the phone very little and said very little when he did. Mostly “yes,” “no,” and “what?” Did he think the phones were bugged? Did he think the
house
was bugged? Maybe that's why he wanted the meeting outdoors. Kyle shook his head. Now who was acting paranoid?
Crickets clicked loudly and the resident owl hooted, though it was still light when Kyle finished setting out the chairs. Cars and trucks began pulling in, churning up mud from the wet ground, and parking near the barn.
Kyle recognized some of the men from the night at the Hoot Owl, but most he'd never seen before, and there were no women. The men carried rifles and wore combat boots and camouflage jumpsuits.
His dad had changed into a fresh uniform with stars on the shoulders. “General!” Men came up to him and saluted. For the moment Kyle put aside his misgivings about the militia and basked just in being his father's son. He grinned until his face hurt. Brian and his mom should see all the respect and admiration shown his dad. He wandered around, listening to bits of conversation, excited by the undercurrent of expectation.
“Kyle.” His father put an arm around his shoulders. “Go on back to the house, now. You can join us when the meeting's over and go to the firing range with us.”
“Aw, Dad, can't I stay?”
“This is an order, soldier!”
Kyle turned back to the house, viciously kicking up dirt as he went. If only he could hide someplace and listen, he thought, glancing back. But the chairs had been set up in the openâhe'd put them there himselfâwith so much clear space around that no one could eavesdrop without being seen.
“What are they meeting about?” he asked Marie. She was preparing a big pot of coffee. The kitchen smelled of chocolate, and two large sheets of cookies cooled on the kitchen table.
“Probably what they always talk about. There'll be reports on what new weapons they've bought. Someone always goes on about Ruby Ridge and Waco, Texas, and how the government lied about them. Pete's sure to ask for more donations to the NRA to fight gun control.” She paused, pouring ground coffee into the filter to the forty-cup limit, then reached over and patted Kyle's hand as he reached for some cookies. “Easy on the cookies, darlin'. Those men can really put it away and the turnout tonight is bigger than usual.”
Kyle took two cookies and sat down at the table. “What happened to Hiram's dad?”
Marie plugged the coffeepot into the wall, stalling, Kyle thought. But then she turned to him and said, “I guess you'll find out soon enough, so you may as well hear. Earl's had a notice from the IRSâyou know, the tax service?”
Kyle nodded. The coffeepot began to gurgle. Marie sat down, facing him. “Seems they plan to take over his farm if he doesn't come up with the taxes he owes.”
“Can they do that?”
“Sure can.” Marie ran a hand through her curly blond hair and sighed. “Real shame, too. Earl hardly makes ends meet as it is.” She looked worried as she fixed her bright blue eyes on Kyle.
“Couldn't friends loan him the money?”
“Wouldn't take it. Says it's a matter of principle. The government's got no right to his money, no right to tax anyone.”
“Then what will happen?” Kyle asked, leaning toward her, hands folded on the table.
“Well,” Marie said, softly, “Earl Johnson's one of our own. We can't just stand by and do nothin', can we? That farm's all he's got.”
A jangle of alarm rang through Kyle's body. Was this Operation Desperate time? He remembered Mr. Johnson that day in the barn. The man had scared him at first, with his booming voice and huge bulk. But he'd felt that under the toughness and size was a man worn to the edge of despair and exhaustion.
Angry voices came through the open window from the men near the barn, but Kyle couldn't make out words. “Is there anything Dad can do? I meanâto help?” Kyle asked.
“Maybe so,” Marie said, getting up. “We'll just have to wait and see. One thing's for sure. If there's anything can be doneâyour daddy will find a way to do it.”
W
HEN
K
YLE WOKE
the next morning his shoulder ached from holding the rifle to it and taking the recoil; the muscles of his right arm still quivered from the weight of the weapon. The smell of gunpowder still clung to his clothes, yet he felt good. It had been fun! Great fun!
He went through the whole process again in his head. “Ready on the left!” the range officer had called, and “Ready on the right!” Then, “Ready on the firing line!” and “Commence firing!” That was when the targets suddenly popped up.
He'd felt like a grown man in a real army, firing in all kinds of different positionsâprone, kneeling, and standing. Even now his blood raced just remembering.
And the praise! At first he'd thought they were saying it just because he was Ed Klinger's son. But then he realized they meant it. “Good eye, boy!” “Nice score!” “Chip off the old block!” and lots more. The best praise had come from his father. Not in words, but in the satisfied grin, the look of pride, and the light touch on the shoulder.
Kyle stretched, groaned at his sore muscles, and rolled cautiously out of bed. He whistled as he showered. All yesterday's worries seemed overblown. Whatever his dad did, he decided, would be all right with him. After all, Dad wasn't a criminal! How had he ever considered turning him in?
He rushed through his choresâsweeping up the spent shells behind the barn, cleaning Blackie's stall and getting his feed, putting kibble and water out for Prince. And then he fixed three sandwiches, in case Verity and her sister didn't bring lunch, added cookies, drinks, and fruit, and stuffed it all into his day pack.