HUNCHSTER
by Matthew Hughes
Matt Hughes reports that Hespira,
the third novel featuring Henghis Hapthorn (a character familiar to many of our
readers), is due out in September.
This new story is not set in the Penultimate Earth where the majority of his
tales occur, but it should be no less entertaining for being set in our world.
You’d think I’d remember the kid’s name, but I never could. One of those “J” names that suddenly got popular back in the eighties, Jared, or Jeremiah, might even have been Jedediah. Doesn’t matter now. We mostly just called him “the kid in Lee’s basement,” except when he’d join us for Saturday night poker in Lee’s garage. Then he liked us to call him “the Hunchster.”
That was on account of the way he played. I mean, there are two ways to go with seven-card stud. You can either play the cards, look at what’s in your hand and on the table, and figure the odds you’ll get that fifth spade or that third queen. Or you can play the players, where you not only watch for the tells but read the personalities, so you know if a guy’s got the balls to try running a bluff past you or if he’s sharp enough to know when you’re faking it with a busted straight.
The Hunchster, though, he had his own way of playing. He didn’t look around the table at the cards, didn’t look at the players. “I get hunches,” he said, the first time I asked him what was going on. He was raking in another heap of nickels, dimes, and quarters from the middle of Lee’s old Formica-topped table out in the garage where we played most Saturday nights. We used to play in Lee’s basement, until he put in the extra plumbing and started renting out the room.
If you’re any kind of poker player, what I just put down here tells you something about Lee, and about the rest of us. We played for nickels, dimes, and quarters because that’s all we could afford. And the reason Lee let this kind of weird-looking stranger live in his house was because the kid got a disability check every month. His dependable rent made up for the tips Lee didn’t get when he drove people from the bus depot out to the IncarcerCorp prison so they could visit their inmate relatives. Most of them couldn’t really afford the taxi fare, but it was a long walk out of town and the bus only ran twice a day.
Mitch and I, we were better off than Lee, but only just. IncarcerCorp paid three bucks an hour over minimum wage. No benefits, but the work was full-time and you could live on the wages—just hope you never got sick. Also, a prison generates a lot of other jobs, even when the outfit that runs it is so cheap it makes the inmates do their own laundry and swamp out the cell blocks. So, all our wives worked part-time for minimum wage in the kitchens, or in the in-house hospital—again, no benefits—and our families had enough to get by on. Just enough to keep the town alive.
But at least we had jobs and could count on keeping them. After what had happened with United PressForm and the Breithertz Institute, that was a big deal. We used to tell each other, “At least nobody’s going to put crime out of business.”
* * * *
Stan and Ron were the other regulars at the table Saturday nights. Sometimes, they brought Ron’s friend Dooley. None of them had been taken on when IncarcerCorp held its big hiring fair, but they got jobs with a wholesaler that supplied the prison with everything from dungarees to macaroni. Stan and Dooley drove truck and Ron operated a forklift in the warehouse. Word was that IncarcerCorp and the wholesaler were both owned by the same investment syndicate that was headquartered in the Bahamas or somewhere. Nobody was a hundred percent sure, but so what? Paying the mortgage and sending the kids to school—that was what mattered.
Now, with me telling you all this, you’re maybe thinking that my mind is wandering, why don’t I follow through on where I started: the kid in Lee’s basement and his peculiar way of playing poker? But it all ties in.
“You’re saying you just play hunches?” I said, that first time, while he sorted the nickels, dimes, and quarters into stacks and Stan dealt the first two down cards and one on deck for the next round.
He looked up at me. Actually, no—he never really looked at anybody. He’d look in your direction, sure, but never eye-to-eye. Instead he’d lock onto your nose, or your shoulder, or your forehead. And there was never anything to read in his eyes. He only used them for seeing.
“I am an intuitive,” he said. I remember the word because I used it right away, asking him, “What the heck is an intuitive?”
I should’ve known better. You asked this kid a question, you were going to get an answer. In spades. I didn’t understand half of what he said, stuff about lateral connections and something that sounded like “snapses.” Then he was talking about a “brokers area,” which for a while I thought was somewhere around Corpus Cristi, except it turned out he was talking about some other place with a name like Corpus Clothes-um. Then he said they were parts of the brain, and his brain didn’t work the way other people’s did.
Lee told me later that the reason the kid got that monthly disability check was that he had a brain disease called Ass-burgers. I waited for the punch line, but he said it was a real disease, though it wasn’t catching. Wayne Breithertz, who’d brought the kid over when they were all packing to leave, told Lee about it. The kid was a little strange, but harmless. And he had nowhere else to go.
So we’re back to the poker table. Stan dealt out the first three cards and said, “Hunchster, your bet,” and just like that the kid stopped talking about brains. Right in the middle of a sentence. He picked up his hole cards, stared at them for a second, then put them down. He didn’t look at anybody or at any of the cards on deck. Just pushed a quarter out toward the antes. A quarter was the maximum bet until all the cards had been dealt.
“Hunch?” I said.
He didn’t look at me, just kept his peculiar eyes on his hole cards. “Uh huh,” he said.
I had a pair of sevens in the hole and a king showing, but I flipped the king over and shoved it and the sevens away from me. “Fold,” I said.
* * * *
The kid was in Lee’s basement because he got left behind when the Breithertz Institute folded. Wayne Breithertz was the nerdiest nerd our local high school ever produced. After eleventh grade he went off to some big college back east and next we heard of him he’d turned into one of those ten-day tycoons who made a pile off the dot-com bubble. Old Wayne had come up with some bright idea that everybody thought was going to change the world.
Until it didn’t.
But for a while the money was flowing, and he was our local hero because he came back home and bought up the old UPF factory. He spent about a half a gazillion dollars turning it into some kind of research center.
You may not know the name United PressForm. But turn over the tinfoil plate next time you take a frozen pie out of the freezer, or the tray that holds a TV dinner. You’ll probably see UPF stamped into the bottom. Their plant on Becker Road used to supply half the pie-and-TV-dinner makers west of the Mississippi. Another UPF factory in New Jersey supplied most of the east. My old man signed on with the company in 1953 when he came home from Korea and spent his whole working life in that building. Most of our dads did. After high school, so did me and Lee and the rest of us. UPF provided half the jobs in town.
Until it didn’t.
In 1995, the company packed up the whole shebang and moved to Nogales. That’s when we found out our dads wouldn’t be getting any more pension checks—the directors had spent their money and everybody else’s. Nobody can tell me that wasn’t the bad news that brought on the heart attack and killed the old man.
But then Wayne came home, bought the vacant plant cheap, and remade it into some kind of combination open-plan office and supergeek playground. He brought in some pretty strange people, of which the Hunchster was by no means the strangest. We didn’t know what all those newcomers were doing out there, but they had plenty of money to spend on everything from fancy coffees in paper cups to an even fancier condo development around a man-made lake that Wayne had dug out of what used to be pasture land south of town. And we all had jobs again, making sure the nerds stayed happy.
Until we didn’t.
In 2001, the stock market yanked the rug out from under the Breithertz Institute. Trucks rolled in and hauled away all the computers and video game machines to sell at ten cents on the dollar. The condos emptied out and stayed empty. Last I heard, Wayne was teaching business math at some community college in Wisconsin. His collection of geeks went to wherever geeks go. Except for the Hunchster, who moved into Lee’s basement along with a trunkload of electronic gear he’d built himself. Wayne said it would have just gone to the dump.
* * * *
Ask the kid what he was doing down there all day, you’d get an answer. Not that it made a whole lot of sense. He had some theory involving string. He was interested in “where new treenos went” and how they got there. “Temporary recapture,” I thought he said once.
“Temporary recapture of what?” I said. The words had caught my interest because it was a week after the IncarcerCorp job fair and I’d been accepted for training as a guard. They’d already broken ground for the main block.
“Not temporary,” he said, “temporal. Temporal recapture.”
As if that explained it all.
* * * *
Then came another Saturday night and we were setting up in the garage: beer and taco chips and salsa. Lee went to the door at the side of the house that led down to the basement and asked the kid if he was going to play. I heard him call a second time, then he came into the garage and said, “He don’t answer.”
“He home?” I said.
“He’s always home.” He paused, then said, “Some weird noises down there.”
I was going to say, “What else is new?” but just then Ron came in and spoke over me, saying Dooley wasn’t coming. Five was not enough for a decent game. I said, “We need the kid.”
By now Lee had sat down and was breaking out the red, white, and blue plastic chips. “So go get him,” he said.
I went out of the garage and over to the basement entrance, down a half-dozen steps. The inner door was ajar. I rapped on it but got no answer. There was a combination humming-hissing sound coming from the basement suite, getting louder then softer, louder then softer. I pushed open the door.
The kid was sitting on a kitchen chair with his back to me, hunched over a table that was covered with all kinds of electronics and computer gear, connected by a mess of cables and wires. That’s where the humming and hissing were coming from. In front of him was a wide-screen monitor and he was staring into it while reaching out with one hand to a control panel of knobs and switches that was off to one side. He’d turn one knob then try another, his eyes never leaving the screen.
I moved up behind him. The image on the monitor was distorted and grainy. He reached for another knob and twiddled it, and suddenly the shot came into focus. The colors were washed out but I recognized it: Lee’s driveway, just outside, and the Ryder house across the street.
There was something funny about the picture, though it took me a few seconds to put my finger on it. Parked in front of the house was Jeff Ryder’s old red El Camino, which he’d smashed up and sent to the wrecker’s sometime back in the early eighties.
“What is this?” I said.
The kid didn’t turn. “What I’ve been working on. Temporal recapture.” He pointed to a readout at the bottom right corner of the screen. It said: 05-24-1981 followed by a clock that was running in hours, minutes, seconds, and tenths of a second. Running backward. As I watched, Jeff came out of the house—he was walking backward—but this was Jeff without a pot belly and with way more hair than when I’d seen him yesterday. He got into the El Camino. A few seconds later, it drove away, in reverse.
“What am I looking at?” I said.
He turned toward me, looked at my IncarcerCorp belt buckle. “The past.”
I took a deep breath. “A time machine?”
“But just for looking. Maybe hearing, too. I need to work on that.” He turned back to the equipment, adjusted another knob, the screen blurred then cleared, and I was seeing a farmer’s field. Now the readout said: 04-15-1902. Into the frame, walking backward, came a man, then a plow, then a mule. “I also need to miniaturize the components and work out a better power source. Then you could take it anywhere.”
I felt a hollowness in my chest, like the time I was at a party and tried breathing helium. “You could take it any place and see what happened there, anytime in the past?”
“Maybe not anytime. Probably not back to dinosaur times.” He twiddled the knob again. Now there was nothing but prairie. I didn’t bother looking at the date. I was too busy thinking.
And what I was thinking was, Jeez, not again.
I went back to the garage. Mitch and Stan had shown up. I cracked a beer, drank half of it in one swallow, and said, “We got a problem.”
* * * *
The kid must’ve had a hunch. He tried to barricade the door, but there were too many of us. Afterward, when we were cleaning up, Mitch and Lee wanted to bust up the equipment and burn the notebooks.
“No,” I said, “that would be wrong.”
So when the time comes, we’ll do what we agreed to do, sitting there at the poker table, after I’d told them what I’d seen. When all our kids are out of school and able to stand on their own feet, we’ll bring the sheriff down to Lee’s basement. We’ll fire up the Hunchster’s equipment and roll back the date to that Saturday night.
We’ll be the first criminals caught by his invention. And we won’t be the last. But eventually, the Hunchster will be remembered as the guy who put crime out of business. Along with IncarcerCorp. And our whole town.
And like I said, just before we poured the concrete over him, “At least nobody’s gonna forget your name.”