Zodiac

Read Online Zodiac by Neal Stephenson - Free Book Online

Book: Zodiac by Neal Stephenson Read Free Book Online
Authors: Neal Stephenson
Ads: Link
concluded that there wasn’t any difference. Cheap beer was cheap beer. No need to pay an extra buck for authenticity. Furthermore, a lot of those cheap importeds got strafed in the taste test. We hated them.
    Hoa’s brother was our waiter. That was unusual, but Hoa had his hands full babysitting the three biddies. Also, he had to chew out an employee in the back room; fierce twanging Vietnamese cut through the hiss of the dishwashers. Tom liked the food, but got full in a hurry.
    â€œYou want doggy bag for that?” Hoa’s brother said.
    â€œAw, sure, why not.”
    â€œGood.” He eyed us for a minute, fighting with his shyness. “I hate when people come, eat little, then I got throw food in dumpster.Make me very mad. Lot of people could use. Like the blacks. They could use. So I get mad sometime, you know, and talk to them. Sometime, I talk about Ethiopia.”
    He left us to be astounded. “Man,” Tom said, “that guy’s really into it.”
    The busboy, emerging from the back, had obviously been at the quiet end of Hoa’s tantrum. I guessed he’d spent most of his life in this country; he had an openly sullen look on his face, and loped and sauntered and jived between the tables. When he came out of the kitchen, we locked eyes again, for the second time that day. Then he glanced away and his lip curled.
    There’s a certain look people give me when they’ve decided I’m just an overanxious duck-squeezer. That was the look. To get through to this guy I’d somehow have to prove my manhood. I’d have to retain my cool in some kind of life-threatening crisis. Unfortunately such events are hard to stage.
    We were staging one in Blue Kills, but it wouldn’t make the Boston news. That was part of the GEE image: to take chances, to be tough and brave, so that people wouldn’t give us the look that Hoa’s busboy was giving me.
    He didn’t know that he was getting fucked coming and going. Basco and a couple of other companies had rained toxic waste on his native land for years. Now, here in America, he was eating the same chemicals, from the same company, off the floor of the Harbor. And Basco was making money on both ends of the deal.
    â€œWhat’re you thinking about?” Tom asked.
    â€œI hate it when people ask me that fucking question,” I said. But I said it nicely.
    â€œYou look real intense.”
    â€œI’m thinking about goddamn Agent Orange,” I said.
    â€œWow,” he said, softly. “That’s what I was thinking about.”
    Tom followed me back across Allston-Brighton and home. I had to ride slow because I was taking my guerrilla route, the one I follow when I assume that everyone in a car is out to get me. My nighttimeattitude is, anyone can run you down and get away with it. Why give some drunk the chance to plaster me against a car? That’s why I don’t even own a bike light, or one of those godawful reflective suits. Because if you’ve put yourself in a position where someone has to see you in order for you to be safe—to see you, and to give a fuck—you’ve already blown it.
    Tom mumbled a few things about paranoia, and then I was too far ahead to hear him. We had a nice ride through the darkness. On those bikes we were weak and vulnerable, but invisible, elusive, aware of everything within a two-block radius. A couple of environmental extremists in a toxic world, headed for a Hefty bag and a warm berth in the mother ship.

6
    We invaded the territory of the Swiss Bastards shortly before dawn. At sea we had three Zodiacs, two frogmen, a guy in a moon suit, and our mother ship, the
Blowfish
. We had a few people on land, working out of the Omni and a couple of rented vehicles. Our numbers were swelled by members of the news media, mostly from Blue Kills and environs but with two crews from New York City.
    At about three in the morning, Debbie had to shake a tail put on

Similar Books

Butterfly Fish

Irenosen Okojie

Let Sleeping Dogs Lie

Suzann Ledbetter

In My Sister's Shoes

Sinéad Moriarty

For Love of Charley

Katherine Allred

The Unlikely Spy

Sarah Woodbury

The Last Girl

Stephan Collishaw

Afterlife

Joey W. Hill