Part 23 (1/2)

”I know. But, I don't know.”

After a double portion of chocolate ice-cream with vanilla-flavored wafers I walked back to Tony's where the lunchtime session was just finis.h.i.+ng. ”Mr. Le Renges still here?” I asked Oona.

”He went over to St. Stephen. He won't be back until six, thank G.o.d.”

”You don't like him much, do you?”

”He gives me the heeby-jeebies, if you must know.”

I went through to Mr. Le Renges' office. Fortunately, he had left it unlocked. I looked in the wastebasket and the bullet was still there. I picked it out and dropped it into my pocket.

On my way back to the Calais Motor Inn a big blue pick-up truck tooted at me. It was Nils Guttormsen from Lyle's Autos, still looking surprised.

”They brought over your transmission parts from Bangor this morning, John. I should have her up and running in a couple of days.”

”That's great news, Nils. No need to break your a.s.s.” Especially since I don't have any money to pay you yet.

I showed the bullet to Velma.

”That's truly weird, isn't it?” she said.

”You're right, Velma. It's weird, but it's not unusual for hamburger meat to be contaminated. In fact, it's more usual than unusual, which is why I never eat hamburgers.”

”I don't know if I want to hear this, John.”

”You should, Velma. See-they used to have federal inspectors in every slaughterhouse, but the Reagan administration wanted to save money, so they allowed the meatpacking industry to take care of its own hygiene procedures. Streamlined Inspection System for Cattle, that's what they call it-SIS-C.”

”I never heard of that, John.”

”Well, Velma, as an ordinary citizen you probably wouldn't have. But the upshot was that when they had no USDA inspectors breathing down their necks, most of the slaughterhouses doubled their line speed, and that meant there was much more risk of contamination. I mean if you can imagine a dead cow hanging up by its heels and a guy cutting its stomach open, and then heaving out its intestines by hand, which they still do, that's a very skilled job, and if a gutter makes one mistake floop! everything goes everywhere, blood, guts, dirt, manure, and that happens to one in five cattle. Twenty percent.”

”Oh, my G.o.d.”

”Oh, it's worse than that, Velma. These days, with SIS-C, meat-packers can get away with processing far more diseased cattle. I've seen cows coming into the slaughterhouse with abscesses and tapeworms and measles. The beef sc.r.a.ps they s.h.i.+p out for hamburgers are all mixed up with manure, hair, insects, metal filings, urine and vomit.”

”You're making me feel nauseous, John. I had a hamburger for supper last night.”

”Make it your last, Velma. It's not just the contamination, it's the quality of the beef they use. Most of the cattle they slaughter for hamburgers are old dairy cattle, because they're cheap and their meat isn't too fatty. But they're full of antibiotics and they're often infected with E. coli and salmonella. You take just one hamburger, that's not the meat from a single animal, that's mixed-up meat from dozens or even hundreds of different cows, and it only takes one diseased cow to contaminate thirty-two thousand pounds of ground beef.”

”That's like a horror story, John.”

”You're too right, Velma.”

”But this bullet, John. Where would this bullet come from?”

”That's what I want to know, Velma. I can't take it to the health people because then I'd lose my job and if I lose my job I can't pay for my automobile to be repaired and Nils Guttormsen is going to impound it and I'll never get back to Baton Rouge unless I f.u.c.king walk and it's two thousand three hundred and seven miles.”

”That far, hunh?”

”That far.”

”Why don't you show it to Eddie Bertilson?”

”What?”

”The bullet. Why don't you show it to Eddie Bertilson. Bertilson's Sporting Guns and Ammo, over on Orchard Street? He'll tell you where it came from.”

”You think so?”

”I know so. He knows everything about guns and ammo. He used to be married to my cousin Patricia.”

”You're a star, Velma. I'll go do that. When I come back, maybe you and I could have some dinner together and then I'll make wild energetic love to you.”

”No.”

”No?”

”I like you, John, but no.”

”Oh.”

Eddie Bertilson was one of those extreme pains-in-the-a.s.s-like people who note down the tailfin numbers of military aircraft in Turkey and get themselves arrested for espionage. But I have to admit that he knew everything possible about guns and ammo and when he took a look at that bullet he knew directly what it was.

He was small and bald with dark-tinted gla.s.ses and hair growing out of his ears, and a Grateful Dead T-s.h.i.+rt with greasy finger-wipes on it. He screwed this jeweler's eyegla.s.s into his socket and turned the bullet this way and that.

”Where'd you find this?” he wanted to know.

”Do I have to tell you?”

”No, you don't, because I can tell you where you found it. You found it amongst the memorabilia of a Viet Nam vet.”

”Did I?” The gun store was small and poky and smelled of oil. There were all kinds of hunting rifles arranged in cabinets behind the counter, not to mention pictures of anything that a visitor to Calais may want to kill: woodc.o.c.k, ruffed grouse, black duck, mallard, blue-wing and green-wing teal.

”This is a 7.92 Gewehr Patrone 98 slug which was the standard ammunition of the Maschinengewehr 34 machine-gun designed by Louis Stange for the German Army in 1934. After the Second World War it was used by the Czechs, the French, the Israelis and the Biafrans, and a few turned up in Viet Nam, stolen from the French.”

”It's a machine-gun bullet?”

”That's right,” said Eddie, dropping it back in the palm of my hand with great satisfaction at his own expertise.

”So you wouldn't use this to kill, say, a cow?”

”No. Unlikely.”