you actually do for a living?â
âIâm an independent expert,â I said.
âAnd what exactly does an independent expert do?â
âHow should I put it? Nothing, really.â
âYou know, Herman,â Injured said, âI donât trust you. Donâttake offenseâjust let me tell you how I see it.â
âGo for it. Lay it all out for me.â
âSimply put, I donât trust you. Youâre going to hang us out to dryâyou donât give a fuck about any of this, and Kocha doesnât give a fuck either. You donât even know what you do for a living. Your brother, on the other handâheâs completely different.â
âWell, whyâd he leave then?â
âDoes it matter?â
âSure it does. Who were those guys in the Jeep?â
âYou scared or something?â
âWhy? Should I be?â
âYouâre shaking in your boots, I can see that. Kochaâs scared of them, too. Everyone is. Your brother wasnât, though.â
âYour brother this, your brother that. Enough already.â
âAll right, take it easy,â Injured said, putting on his jacket and getting back to work. He started up a car. The noise made my ears ring.
âInjured!â I yelled over to him. He paused and looked over in my direction, leaving the car running. âIâm not afraid. Why should I be? Itâs just that youâve got your lives, and Iâve got mine.â
Injured nodded. Maybe he couldnât even hear me.
When evening came, Injured gave the rest of us a mute farewell and went home. Kocha was still sitting on the catapult, covered in orange and blue dust. He seemed to have gotten stuck in some sort of odd torpor; neither Injuredâs departure nor the variouspassing truck driversâ repeated requests that he fill up their tanks made the least impression on him. Injured had shown me how to work the pumps, so I was the one who waited on the three larger-than-life tractor-trailers that came by, looking like huge, weary lizards. The sun had floated over to the other side of the highway, and the twilight burst open like a sunflower. Kocha came to life just as the evening did. Around nine he stood up, locked the booth, and wandered listlessly over to the far edge of the lot. With a heavy sigh, he looped around the truck cab I had slept in last night, squeezed himself inside, and sprawled out in the driverâs seat, extending his legs through the shattered window. I crawled in after him and sat in the passenger seat. Down below, darkness was enveloping the valley. To the east, the sky was already covered in a dim haze, while to the west, right above our heads, red flames spilled across the whole valley, heralding the arrival of night. Mist rose off the river, concealing the little silhouettes of fishermen and the surrounding houses, rolling out onto the road and drifting into the suburbs. The fog that hovered over the valley the city sat in was white. The valley was fading away into darkness, growing more and more indistinct, until it resembled a riverbed, though up here, in the hills, it was still light. Kocha, wide-eyed and stupefied, was staring down at it all, unblinking, his gaze fixed on the advancing night.
âHere,â I said, handing Kocha my MP3 player.
He put the earphones on over his balding head, tapping some buttons to adjust the volume.
âWhat is this, anyway?â he asked.
âCharlie Parker. I ripped ten CDsâ worth.â
Kocha listened for a bit, and then put the âphones down, off to the side.
âYou know why I like it out here?â I asked him. âThere arenât any airplanes going by.â
He looked up. It was true; there really werenât any planes. There were still some lights, though: just reflections, maybe, shooting across the sky; green sparks glowing here and there; golden balls spinning along; clouds massing to the north, giving off
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