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Authors: Carl Hiaasen

BOOK: Chomp
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“Here, have a look.…”

Mastiffs, like most species of bats, are equipped to hang upside down. However, they are not accustomed to being snatched by their tails and dangled in midair.

And even when half blinded by light, they are able at close range to recognize the presence of predators, particularly if such a predator has a shiny chin, a big oval mouth and vivid, orange-tinted hair.

“There are probably only fifteen grams of meat on this fellow’s bones. But when you’re as hungry as I am, this little bugger looks as juicy as a T-bone steak!

“Unfortunately, the rain has soaked all the tinder, so I can’t make a fire for cooking. That leaves me only one choice, I guess
.

“Now, please don’t try this yourself—wild bats can be vicious, and their teeth are needle sharp. Remember, I’m an experienced survivalist. I know how to handle these unpredictable rascals.…”

The mastiff bat that Derek Badger slowly lowered toward his gaping maw wasn’t vicious. She simply didn’t want to be eaten.

And so she reacted defensively and without hesitation.
She chomped down on the first chompable target that came within reach, which happened to be Derek’s plump, purple-blotched tongue.

“Aaaieeeeeegh! Aaaieeeeeegh! Aaaieeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeegh!”

The shrieks were not part of the script that he’d hastily composed on a paper napkin following the bat’s unexpected arrival. The shrieks were totally spontaneous.

“Don’t move! Don’t move!” Raven Stark cried, but Derek did move. He tipped backward into a wet patch of ferns, the flapping mammal still attached to his bloody face.

“Cut!” barked the director. “Somebody go get Cray!”

Wahoo’s father stood over the fallen TV star, who lay rigid and goggle-eyed. The front of his safari shirt was dappled with wet crimson splotches, and the bat dangled from his mouth like a bizarre holiday ornament.

“Unbelievable,” Mickey said.

“Do something!” Raven pleaded.

Mickey turned to his son. “I’ll need my serious gloves.”

While Wahoo ran back to the other camp, Tuna stepped closer to take a look. “What kind of bat is that?” she asked. “It’s a freetail, I know, but what species?”

Wahoo’s father shrugged. He directed the crew to re-aim their bright lights toward the spot where Derek Badger had fallen, illuminating the scene like a hospital operating room. As soon as Wahoo returned with the heavy gloves, Mickey fitted them on and told everybody to stand back.

“Is he still breathing?” Raven said. “Please tell me he’s still breathing.”

“They’re
both
breathing.” Mickey knelt beside Derek and pondered how to remove the frightened creature without also removing the tip of Derek’s tongue.

Wahoo happened to know his father wasn’t fond of handling bats. They were tricky to wrangle and, like other mammals, they sometimes carried diseases. However, this was an emergency, and nobody else at the campsite was qualified to deal with it.

Mickey leaned in to whisper in one of Derek’s ears: “Blink twice if you can hear me.”

Derek blinked two times. The director clapped in relief, and some of the other crew members cheered.

“Hush!” Mickey snapped over his shoulder. Then, to Derek: “Don’t worry, we’ll get your dumb butt out of this mess. The trick is to not make your furry little friend any madder than it already is. So you’ve gotta stay still,
mate
, no matter how much this hurts. Blink once if you understand.”

Again Derek blinked. Mickey instructed Wahoo to strip the leaves off a fern, which left only the soft green stem. Wahoo handed it to his father, who said, “Perfect.”

“What are you going to do?” Raven asked skeptically.

“Tickle it,” said Wahoo’s father.

“You can’t be serious.”

“I believe he is,” said Tuna.

Wahoo observed that the crew was preparing to videotape the delicate procedure. Normally Derek would have
protested indignantly, not wanting his TV audience to see their super-masculine hero disabled by a creature weighing two ounces. On this occasion, though, he remained mute.

Mickey got down on the ground so that he was level with the bat, which regarded him unpleasantly with moist black eyes. It didn’t appear to Wahoo and Tuna that the bewildered animal was enjoying the flavor of Derek Badger.

Using the flexible stem of the fern, Wahoo’s father went to work on the bat’s belly, lightly prodding and stroking. Very soon the mastiff began to twitch and squeak.

“Zoom in for a close-up! Hurry!” the director ordered the cameraman.

Wahoo waved his arms and motioned for everyone to remain still. He feared that the agitated bat would let go of Derek and then glom on to his father.

In fact, the critter had only one item on its agenda: escape.

There are no scientific studies that address the question of whether or not bats can experience the sensation of being tickled, the way people do. But whatever Mickey was doing with the fern stem, it worked. With a shudder, the bat unhooked its fangs from Derek’s swelling tongue.

“Now kill it! Kill it quick!” Raven cried.

“Don’t be ridiculous,” said Wahoo’s father.

The animal made a spitting noise and repositioned itself on Derek’s spray-tanned forehead, where it stretched its bony wings. Unlike most other bats, mastiffs can lift off from a flat surface, and that’s what this one did. On the next gust
of wind it took flight, zigzagging through the hot beams of the TV lights until it disappeared into the dark canopy of the hardwoods.

Wahoo and Tuna high-fived each other, while the director called out, “Bravo, Mr. Cray. Well done!”

Raven rushed anxiously to Derek’s side, babbling something about rabies and distemper. Wahoo’s father assured her that the bat wasn’t sick. “She bit Mr. Beaver out of self-defense, pure and simple.”

Derek showed no reaction to being called Beaver, another indication that he might have been in shock. Several crew members gathered around and carried him to his tent. Raven followed gravely, carrying a first-aid kit.

To Wahoo and Tuna, Mickey said, “Come on. Let’s get some sleep.”

A slashing rain chased them back to their camp. It poured all night long on the tree island, and no living thing stirred.

Except one.

SIXTEEN

The airboat awoke Wahoo. He figured it was coming to get Derek Badger and take him away for medical treatment.

Emerging from the tent, Wahoo saw Tuna reading a green book. It was a field guide to Florida mammals. She kept it in her canvas tote bag with several other books, journals and sketch pads. Tuna never let the bag out of her sight.

“Here’s our prime suspect,” she announced. “It’s called a mastiff bat.
Eumops glaucinus floridanus
.”

She showed the photograph in the field guide to Wahoo. “Yeah, that’s the one,” he agreed.

“I’m gonna learn the Latin names of all tropical bats, starting today.”

“You seen my dad?”

“He went for a hunt.” Tuna was eating a lame breakfast—trail mix and Mountain Dew. “I bet they’re taking Derek to Miami for rabies shots,” she said.

“Which way did Pop go?”

“Relax, Lance. He said his head feels fine.”

Their campsite was a mud pit because of the overnight rain. Wahoo didn’t bother trying to start the fire and cook some food. He settled for two snack bars and a lukewarm lime Gatorade.

“So, what happens now?” Tuna asked.

After seeing Derek’s trance-like condition the night before, Wahoo assumed that the Everglades episode of
Expedition Survival!
would be canceled and that his father’s wrangling job was over.

“I guess we pack up and go home,” he said.

“Home, sweet home.” Tuna chuckled bitterly. “I can’t wait.”

Wahoo noticed that the bruise beneath her eye had faded a bit, taking on a yellowish tinge. “Maybe you can stay with us for a while,” he suggested.

She was flipping through the bat chapter of the book. “I’m sure I’ll hear from Daddy, soon as he needs his laundry done. That’s the usual program. He’s the king of fake tears and phony apologies.”

“You’ve run away before?”

Tuna looked up. “Sure. Twice.”

“And you go back.”

“Yeah, but it’s not like forever. Mom’s serious about leaving him.”

Wahoo had an idea. “Soon as Pop and I get paid for this job, we’ll get you a plane ticket to Chicago.”

“No,” said Tuna, “but thanks anyway.” She turned away, trying not to choke up.

“School’s out for the summer. There’s no reason for you to stay here.”

She tucked the field guide in her bag and popped to her
feet. “Look, I know you guys are tryin’ to help, but I’ll be okay. I can deal with my dad until Mom gets home.”

“All right,” said Wahoo, thinking:
But the man’s got a gun
.

Tuna broke into a smile when she spotted three striped butterflies, flitting in a casual ballet through the hammock.

“Hey, Lance, check it out!” she said. “Zebra swallowtails.
Eurytides marcellus!

Wahoo wondered if the butterflies were traveling together or had met by coincidence. High overhead he saw a string of somber turkey buzzards, riding the thermals under a mat of gray-blue clouds. The sun had been up for some time, but the heavy sky gave no clue it was morning. Wahoo was tired of the lousy weather, tired of being wet.

His father stepped out of the scrub holding a pair of Everglades rat snakes. They were good ones—five-footers, dark orange with grayish stripes and butter-colored underbellies.

“Look who I found,” he said cheerily.

“Biters?” asked Wahoo.

“Big-time.”

Tuna agreed that the snakes were beautiful, but she kept a distance.

“All right, Lucille,” said Wahoo, “tell us what Mr. Linnaeus would call ’em.”

“Wait, I’m tryin’ to remember.” She closed her eyes in concentration. “The scientific name is
Elaphe
something-or-other. It’ll come to me.”

Wahoo grinned. “Way to go, Pop. I think you stumped her.”

Mickey wasn’t listening to the conversation. He heard something nearby—the heavy snapping of branches. “We got a visitor,” he said.

Link, the hulking airboat driver, stalked into the clearing. He wore a grime-streaked undershirt, faded Wranglers and rotted hiking boots with no laces. He scanned the campsite, sneering slightly when his eyes settled on Mickey and the snakes.

“Where’s he at?” Link demanded.

“Who?” said Wahoo.

“The TV man.”

Tuna stepped forward. “You mean Mr. Badger?”

“Yeah. He be gone.”

Wahoo’s father muttered, “If only.” He had an
Elaphe
entwined on each arm.

“Keep dem tings ’way f’me,” Link warned.

“Aw, don’t be a baby.”

“TV man be gone from his tent dis mornin’.”

Tuna said, “Maybe he went for a hike.”

“Or mebbe he out here wid you.”

Mickey laughed. “That’s right, Sherlock. We kidnapped him in the middle of the night! I remember now.”

“Pop, lay off,” said Wahoo. Link was built like a refrigerator, and he didn’t have a rollicking sense of humor.

“Dey tole me to come’n git him,” the airboat driver went
on. “Take him back to Sickler’s. Hospital sent a ambulance on account of he got bit by a otter.”

“Actually, it was a bat,” Tuna interjected.

Wahoo couldn’t imagine why Derek Badger took off, or where he might have gone. The tree island wasn’t very large, maybe fifteen acres. “We’ll help you find him,” he said to Link.

While Mickey bagged the rat snakes in a pillowcase, Tuna and Wahoo varnished themselves with bug spray. Link accepted a Gatorade, which he downed in four gulps. Then they all set out through the vines and the hardwoods in search of the missing reality TV star. Wahoo’s father led the way.

Before long, they crossed paths with the director and the crew, accompanied by a distraught Raven Stark, her red hair laced with spiderwebs.

“We’ve looked everywhere,” she lamented. “Derek’s gone! Vanished!”

“Not possible,” said Mickey.

The director pulled him aside and whispered, “What if a bear got him?”

“Florida bears don’t eat people. Plus, there’d be blood and bones.”

“Then he must be lost out here someplace.…”

Mickey said, “He’s not lost. He’s hiding.”

They were gathered at the low, skinny tail of the island, where the trees thinned out.

“Hiding?” Raven exclaimed. “From what?” She turned and called Derek’s name.

Wahoo and Tuna felt obliged to do the same. There was no response. Mickey advised the group to split up once more and work their way back toward the main camp.

“Here. Take a walkie-talkie,” said the director.

That’s when they heard the loud growl of the airboat engine, cranking up. Link at first appeared confused, then angry.

“DAT’S MINE!” he bellowed, and lowered his shoulders, crashing like a mad buffalo through the underbrush.

The director cursed, and Raven let out a despairing moan. Wahoo and Tuna could hardly believe what was happening.

Mickey Cray shook his head. “It just gets better and better.”

The executive producer of
Expedition Survival!
was a man named Gerry Germaine, a crabby, bullet-headed fellow who drove a canary-yellow Ferrari and wore loafers that cost nine hundred dollars. The sprawling office from which he ruled his television empire was in Studio City, California, not far from downtown Los Angeles. In addition to
Expedition Survival!
, Gerry Germaine produced three other popular reality shows—
Rattlesnake Roundup, Shrimp Wars
and
Polar Madness
, which featured a quarrelsome family that lived on a melting iceberg.

Gerry Germaine seldom watched his own TV programs, but he paid close attention to the budgets. Derek Badger was a constant problem, and his latest salary demands had angered the bosses at the Untamed Channel, which broadcast all of Gerry Germaine’s reality shows. Having recently purchased an expensive vacation home in Aspen, Colorado, Gerry Germaine wanted to remain on good terms with the Untamed Channel. Therefore it was his view that
Expedition Survival!
would do just fine without Derek Badger, whose frequent tantrums and mishaps were expensive.

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