It was Orley Mattup’s killing
of the old lab technician that really made us hate
him.
Mattup was a guard at the reactor
installation at Bayless, Kentucky, where my friend
Danny Hern and I were part of the staff when the Outsiders
took everything over. In what god-forsaken mountain
hole they had found Mattup, and how they got him to
sell out to them, I don’t know. He was
an authentic human, though. You can tell an Outsider.
Mattup and Danny and I were playing
high-low-jack the night Uncle Pete was killed, sitting
on the widewalk where Mattup had a view of the part
of the station he was responsible for. High-low-jack
is a back-country card game; Danny had learned it
in northern Pennsylvania, where he came from, and
Mattup loved the game, and they had taught it to me
because the game is better three-handed. The
evening sessions had been Danny’s idea I
think he figured it might give him a line on Mattup.
On the night in question, Mattup was
on a week’s losing streak and was in a foul
humor. He was superstitious, and he had called
for a new deck twice that evening and walked around
his seat four different times. His bidding was
getting wilder.
“You’d better cool down,”
Danny told him. “Thing to do is ride out
the bad luck, not fight it.”
Orley picked his nose and looked at
his cards, “Bid four,” he growled.
Four is the highest possible bid.
Tim played his cards well and he had good ones.
He had sewed up three of his points when we heard somebody
moving around down on the reactor floor. It was
old Uncle Pete Barker, one of the technicians.
“What you want down there?” bawled Mattup.
“Just left my cap by the control
room,” said Uncle Pete, “and thought I’d
go get it.”
“You keep the hell away from there,” grunted
Mattup.
Uncle Pete stopped and stood gazing
up at us. We went on playing. It was the
last card of the hand, and would either win the game
for Mattup or lose it for him. Orley slapped
his card down; it was a crucial card, the jack.
Danny took it with a queen and Mattup had lost the
game.
I felt like clearing out. Mattup’s
face was purple and his eyes looked like wolves’
eyes. He glared at Danny, making a noise in his
throat, and then I saw his gaze leave Danny and go
to something down by the reactor.
It was Uncle Pete, shuffling along
toward the control room.
Mattup didn’t say a word.
He stood up and unholstered the thing the Outsiders
had given him and pointed it at Uncle Pete. There
was a ringing in our ears and Uncle Pete began to
twist. Something inside him twisted him, twisting
inside his arms, his legs, head, trunk, even his fingers.
It was only for a few seconds. Then the ringing
stopped, and Uncle Pete sunk to the ground, and there
was the silence and the smell.
Mattup made us leave the body there
until we had played two more hands. Danny won
one; he was a man with good nerves. When we were
back in our room he said, “That did it I’m
going to get that guy.”
“I hate his big thick guts,”
I said, buttoning my pajama shirt, “but how
are you going to get him?”
“I’ll get him,”
said Danny. “Meanwhile, we’ll keep
playing cards.”
Things went on almost normally at
the Bayless reactor. It was a privately-owned
pool-type reactor, and we were sent samples of all
sorts of material for irradiation from all over the
country. Danny was one of the irradiation men;
I generally handled controlling. The Outsiders
had filled the place with telescreens and guards,
and all mail was opened, but there was no real interference
with the work. I began to worry a little about
Danny. Almost every afternoon he spent an hour
alone in our room, with the door closed.
Mattup kept getting worse; an animal
with power. He used to go hunting with the damnable
Outsider weapon, although the meat killed with it
wasn’t fit to eat, and he used it on birds until
there wasn’t one left anywhere near the plant.
He never killed a bluebird, though. He said it
was bad luck. Sometimes he drank moonshine corn
liquor, usually alone, because the Outsiders wouldn’t
touch it, but sometimes he made some of us drink with
him, watching sharply to see we didn’t poison
him and craftily picking his nose. When he was
drunk he was abusive.
One night we were in our room, dead
for sleep after a long game, and Danny said, “Let
me show you something.”
He shuffled the cards, I cut, and
he dealt me an ace, king, queen, jack, ten and deuce
of spades. He shuffled again and dealt me the
same in hearts.
“Watch as closely as you can,”
he grinned. “See if you can catch me.”
I couldn’t.
“I’ve been practicing,” he said.
“I’m going to get Mattup.”
“What good will it do to beat
him in cards? You’ll only make him sore.”
I was relieved to learn what Danny had been doing,
alone in our room, but this card-sharp angle didn’t
make much sense to me.
“Who says I’m going to
beat him at cards?” smiled Danny. “By
the way, did you hear the rumor? They’re
going to break up the staff, Outsider policy, send
us to Oak Ridge, Argonne, Shippingport, send new people
down here.”
“That doesn’t leave you much time,”
I said.
“Time enough,” said Danny.
The next night Mattup began a fantastic
streak of luck. It seemed he couldn’t lose,
and he was as unpleasant a winner as he was a loser.
“You boys don’t know what
card-playin’ is,” he’d gloat.
“Think you’re pretty smarty with all that
science stuff but you can’t win a plain old
card game. You know why you can’t beat me,
boys?”
“Because you’re too smart, I guess,”
said Danny.
“Well, yeah, and somethin’
else. I dipped my hands in spunk water, up on
the mountain where you can never find it, and besides
that I spit on ever’ card in this deck and wiped
it off. Couldn’t lose now to save my life.”
“Maybe you’re right,” said Danny,
and went on dealing.
In a few days the rumor of moving
was confirmed; I was being sent to Oak Ridge, Danny
to Argonne. Mattup kept winning, and “suggested”
that we raise the stakes. By the day that we
were to leave we owed him every cent we had.
I paid up soberly; I wouldn’t
give Mattup any satisfaction by complaining.
It looked as though Danny wasn’t going to “get”
Mattup after all. But Danny surprised me.
“Look, buster,” he wheedled.
“If I pay you seventy-five bucks I won’t
have a cent left. How about me paying half now
and the rest later?”
“No good,” said Mattup.
“You got it pay me. If you can’t
pay cash gimme your watch. I know you got one.”
“Look, buster ”
“Quit callin’ me buster.”
“What am I going to live on until I get paid
again?”
“What do I care?”
It went on like that until the busses
for the airport were nearly ready to leave and both
men seemed angry enough to kill each other.
“Let’s go,” I begged Danny.
“Pay him and leave.”
“All right then!” Danny
snapped, and pulled out his wallet. He counted
out all his bills into Mattup’s hand.
“You’re a buck short,” said Mattup.
“Why not forget the buck?” said Danny.
“You can spare it.”
“You’re a buck short,” repeated
Mattup, scowling.
Danny dashed his wallet to the ground.
“You’re even taking my change!”
He got his jacket from the back of a chair it
was a hot day and emptied change from the
side pocket.
There were two quarters and a half
dollar, and he paid them over. “I have
eleven cents left,” he said. “Hell,
take that too. I don’t give a damn.”
Mattup grinned. “Sure I’ll
take it if you weren’t lying when
you said I could have it.”
“It’ll break me,” said Danny.
“I know it,” said Mattup. “Gonna
break your promise?”
The bus driver was honking. “The
hell with you,” Danny said to Mattup, and gave
him a dime and a penny. He looked Mattup in the
eye with a strange expression. “Now, I
gave you that and you didn’t win it. You
took it of your own free will. I offered it to
you and you took it. Right?”
“Right,” said Mattup. “Sucker.”
We scrambled on the bus and as it
pulled away Danny yelled “Hey, Buster, look!”
Mattup looked, and Danny stuck his right arm out the
window, pointing at Mattup with his right forefinger
and his little finger stuck out straight and parallel,
the thumb tucked under. A strange, disturbed
look came over Orley. He turned his back as the
bus roared out of the drive.
At the airport Danny popped into a
phone-booth and got Orley on the line nobody
seemed to care, either Outsiders or guards and
he let me listen.
“Spent your money yet, dead man?” purred
Danny.
“Whacha mean, dead man?”
gruffed Orley’s voice. “You crazy
or something?”
“You know that eleven cents
extra you took?” gloated Danny. “It’s
gonna kill you, Buster, for killing Uncle Pete, and
for everything else you’ve done. I know.
I’ve been talking nights to Uncle Pete.
You’re a dead duck, Orley Mattup! Dead!”
“That’s I don’t
believe it, it’s baloney! I’m going
to spend that eleven cents and get rid of it.”
“You do exactly that, Buster.
I locked the curse on it, and I made the sign on you,
and you have to keep that eleven cents the rest of
your life. If you spend it or if you
lose it, and you will lose it that’s
the end of you.”
“I’ll come out there and
pound the hell out of you!” yelled Mattup.
“Too late, Buster, our planes
are leaving. Goodbye, dead man!”
And we had to run for our planes.
Danny’s pitch sounded pretty weak to me, even
though Orley was superstitious, but I didn’t
get to tell Danny that until nearly five years later.
“I think I got him,” said
Danny. “You don’t know the whole thing.”
A hotel clerk had been listening.
“You mean Orley Mattup, the guard? He got
sick, and said he had a hex on him, and took off one
day and a lot later they found him up on the mountain.
He was dead.”
“Any money on him?” asked Danny.
“Jest some change. They
buried it with him; they heard the hex was locked
onto that money.”
“Congratulations,” I told
Danny. “I didn’t think it’d
work. You scared him to death.”
“Not quite,” said Danny.
“I scared him into hanging onto the money.
That money would have killed anybody that carried
it much longer than the few minutes I handled it.
I’d been keeping the stuff in the reactor beam
tubes. It was radioactive as hell.”