Rod has been a pitchman for
a carnival sideshow—“a lousy mud-show that never played anywhere north of Tennessee”—for
three seasons and he’s good at the spiel, convincing marks to split with their
money for a chance to see the geek bite off a chicken’s head. Rod’s never been
bothered by the show before. It’s “just a lousy chicken.”
But lately, Rod’s had a
problem.
“[S]omething was spooking him. No use kidding himself,
he had to face it.
“Rod was afraid of the geek.”
The trouble is, the geek
isn’t a monster. His name’s Mike, and Mike is the same as all the other geeks.
A wino with an addiction and luck bad enough for him to play the geek, raving
and biting chickens for a few dollars and a bed.
“The Double Whammy” is
classic Robert Bloch; atmospheric, frightening, and clever. Rod, the tale’s
narrator, is a touch unreliable and there is more happening than the reader knows
(maybe). But what the reader knows is enough, and what the reader doesn’t know.
Well, that makes the story that much better. And I enjoyed its every word.
* * *
“The Double Whammy”
was published in Fantastic (February
1970) and I read it in the uneven, but enjoyable, anthology, The Wickedest Show on Earth, edited by
Marcia Muller & Bill Pronzini (Morrow, 1985).
1 comment:
I first read it in the Bloch collection COLD CHILLS, where it appears to be a story Working Up to "The Animal Fair"...a story with an even more disturbing ending, albeit slightly less believable in Not being fantasy.
The way things go, sometimes.
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