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Bait: A Novel, by J. Kent Messum
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No one is coming to your aid. We have ensured this.
Six strangers wake up on a remote island in the Florida Keys with no memory of their arrival. They soon discover their common bond: all of them are heroin addicts. As the first excruciating pangs of withdrawal make themselves felt, the six notice a yacht anchored across open water. On it lurk four shadowy figures, protected by the hungry sharks that patrol the waves. So begins a dangerous game. The six must undertake the impossible—swim to the next island where a cache of heroin awaits, or die trying. When alliances form, betrayal is inevitable. As the fight to survive intensifies, the stakes reach terrifying heights—and their captors’ motives finally begin to emerge.
- Sales Rank: #815825 in eBooks
- Published on: 2013-08-27
- Released on: 2013-08-27
- Format: Kindle eBook
Review
Praise for Bait:
“Reading J. Kent Messum’s Bait is like taking a high dive into black water. What you find in its murky depths is disturbing, pulse-pounding and utterly surprising. An exhilarating debut.” –Megan Abbott, Edgar-Award-winning author of Dare Me
“The stakes could be no higher in this crisply written, fast-paced novel that examines the shifting line between right and wrong, good and evil. Bait will keep readers turning pages late into the night.”
Lori Roy, Edgar-Award-winning author of Bent Road and Until She Comes Home
"Jaws meets Lord of the Flies meets Drugstore Cowboy! A powerhouse debut. The horror dawns on the reader as it dawns on the characters, making for a mesmerizing, one-sitting read." - Steve Ulfelder, Edgar-Award finalist author of Purgatory Chasm and The Whole Lie
About the Author
J. Kent Messum is an author and a musician, and always bets on the underdog. He lives in Toronto with his wife, dog, and three cats.
Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
Prologue
six months ago.
Tick McCabe was sure he could make it. The shore seemed maddeningly close. Less than a hundred yards to go and he still had the strength to continue despite everything he’d endured. The same couldn’t be said for the others. Their luck had run out. Several minutes had passed since Tick heard the last of their waterlogged screams.
Screw them, he thought. All the more for me.
He picked out a large rock on the beach and aimed for it, front-crawling with all the energy he could muster. Progress seemed slow. His body was maxed, sore arms chopping waves, stiff legs scissoring, overworked lungs whistling for air. Cold water pressed inside his ear canals as salt stung his eyes.
Almost there. Keep your eyes on the prize.
From behind him the sounds of laughter rang out. Hoots and jeers working to undermine his confidence. Between splashing and breathing he could hear the taunts clearly, telling him everything he didn’t want to know. Tick turned over to do the back crawl, hitching in a chest full of air.
“Burn in hell, you sons of bitches!”
He expected a barrage of insults, but the howls ceased. Instead there was a lull, voices oddly pacified. Then a clamor arose and something large and rough bumped into Tick’s side, rocking him in the water, making him scream out. An indistinct mass of blue and gray stripes broke the surface and filled the corner of his eye, only to be gone the next instant. Tick treaded water, frantically sweeping glances over the waves. The big one had struck him that time. He was sure of it.
“Shit, shit, shit.”
It was the third bump Tick had taken in the water. This one had been harder and more confident than the others. Probably the last inquisitive hit he would get. Once curiosity was satisfied, Tick would undoubtedly be taken under.
So close.
His front crawl became more desperate. He needed more time, maybe two or three minutes. If only he was allowed to have that of all things. The irony left a bitter taste in his mouth. Tick had lived most of his life with nothing but time on his hands. Now he had precious little, sucked dry in the last few days, which had seen him living more and more on borrowed amounts.
Almost there.
He tried to occupy his mind with anything that would keep it from focusing on what was in the water with him. Muddled memories and half-truths distracted him a little, so many regrets, too many mistakes. If he’d listened, if he’d taken a left over right at a fork in the road, if he hadn’t been so damned hung up and strung out all the time, maybe things would have turned out different.
Stop it. Focus. You can do this. Your life depends on it.
Tick couldn’t focus. Twenty-seven years of age and half of that misspent. Rock bottom had been his status for a while now. His existence felt like it could be nothing else. There was no other way but further down, his failing body heavy, sinking under the scar tissue of an irreparably damaged life. Even the people he thought closest to him were distant. They called him Tick, after all. He was little more than lice to them.
Not far now.
Fuck Tick. Gerald was his name. Gerald Francis McCabe. He couldn’t get that out of his head. The full, proper name suddenly seemed important, key to his corporality. It was his original self, a true identity from long ago, the name his mother and father called him, the name that his siblings, friends, and lovers used. How long had it been since he’d spoken to anyone who called him by name?
Almost—
Something grabbed his right foot and pulled downward. Tick went under, taking a mouthful of salt water, refusing to open his eyes as a force shook him violently below the surface. He fought hard, shaking and twisting his leg against the ferocious grip. Kicking out with his other foot, he connected with something that didn’t like being hit. With one more savage shake there was a pop and release, freedom coming at a painful price. Tick broke the surface with a gasp. Sounds of nearby laughter stabbed at him. He tried to continue swimming, but his right leg didn’t seem as effective as before. A trail of maroon spread behind him as he kicked and stroked. Gray and white shapes writhed through the discoloration. Tick turned onto his back and raised his right leg out of the water.
“Oh, God,” he croaked.
His foot was gone. What remained was a torn stump, flap of skin flopping against ripped meat under the gleam of bone. Sea salt burned the wound. Tick wailed with so much despair he almost choked on it.
“Oh, Jesus, oh, Christ. Just another minute. That’s all I needed. Just one more goddamn —”
Again he went under, pulled by the other foot. He fought again to free himself, hammering painfully at that which gripped him with his new stump. In no time his left foot was separated from his body. He opened his eyes and saw every blurred color and shape he wished was not there. The most solid of these began to converge on him.
Gerald Francis McCabe, he thought. That’s who I was—
He was struck from every angle and with every measure of force. Blood bloomed thick around him. Tick did not resurface. Nearby, beer bottles clinked, cigars burned, and significant money exchanged hands.
One
now.
That an incredible dream.
Small waves hitting the beach, the cry of gulls, the baking heat on his face. All of it should have convinced him otherwise, yet he was certain it was all part of some vivid dream. The press of sun through his eyelids brightened his blackout, though he could not awaken. Trapped in the twilight of emerging thought, he could feel the weight of his body pressing into sand. A cool breeze rippled clothes and licked his hair. Fresh air filled his lungs, the smell of salt water dancing in his nostrils. Goose bumps rose on his forearms as grains of sand peppered him. The clarity of it all was astounding, absolutely electrifying. The good stuff had taken him to wondrous dreamscapes before, but never this real. Not even close.
Might be my best high yet.
Then it dawned on him that there was a difference at the center of this chimera, a horrible absence of euphoria that couldn’t be attributed to the devil’s dust. The hollowness he felt unnerved him. Nash Lemont was now full of doubt. Where was the worm inside his head?
This isn’t a dream.
Increasing clarity eroded his remaining slumber. Any similarities to dreams broke away in pieces like an eggshell, leaving soft-boiled sobriety underneath. The components of Nash’s body came sluggishly back to life. Feet kicked out for the feel of a mattress. Hands grasped for bedsheets. Ears strained for the sounds of city life. Eyelids cracked open, only to squint at the sun’s glare.
Nash rolled over and shook the grogginess from his head, coughing up phlegm, red-rimmed eyes straining open. He could define little. Wide blurs of blue and white streaked with shades of brown and green stretched before him. In the center of his vision sat a drab figure with slumped shoulders.
“Shit, you look like I feel,” a high voice informed him.
“Huh?”
Nash propped himself up on his elbows, blinking to clear his sight. He peered again at the figure, trying to focus. The figure shifted and hunched. It was slender with white, dirty skin. Long thick hair hung over the face. The hidden features and gargoyle posture made Nash uncomfortable. He wiped away sand stuck to his sweating cheek and looked around in a hundred-andeighty-degree sweep. What came from his mouth was little more than a croak.
“Where . . . ?”
From his ten to two o’clock a wall of tall grass made a natural fence along the shore. He ran his line of sight down the green divider until he reached his three o’clock. What he saw there made him gasp. The unexpected white beach did not alarm Nash Lemont. What alarmed Nash was the other bodies flopped on the sand.
Two
three days ago.
hat alarmed Nash was how much no-namebrand shit he was putting into his grocery basket these days. There was a time, and not too long ago, when he would have insisted on some brand names among his purchases. Some things you just didn’t crap out on: ketchup, mustard, mayo, mac ’n’ cheese, margarine maybe. Now all he looked for was the cheapest alternative, willing to undercut any provision he once enjoyed with its poorer, dumber cousin. Nash picked up a bottle of ketchup.
“Heinz,” he said, looking at the label. “There are no other kinds.” But there were other kinds, for less than half the price too. Their names were suspect—he’d never even remotely heard of them. Some had writing on the labels in languages Nash had never seen.
Some Middle Eastern or Indonesian crap or something, he thought as he dropped one in the basket.
These shopping trips were where Nash felt most pathetic. Budget stretched so thin it was floss compared to the kind of money he’d dropped once upon a time. His eyes moistened as the full realization of his situation sank in once again. He looked at the discount peanut butter brands, gritty and oily, reserved for the poor.
“Rock bottom,” he mumbled.
So unbelievably broke all the time, that was what he was. When he was lucky enough to get some money it couldn’t stay in his wallet for more than a few hours before he pissed it away or blew it up his arm. The more he thought about it the shittier he felt. Shame coated the bottom of his belly in lead and cramped the smooth muscle around his heart. Nine out of ten addicts never recover. Nash never liked those odds.
The aisles weren’t busy. He strolled, taking advantage of the supermarket’s air- conditioning, a luxury he no longer enjoyed in his apartment due to his need for some fast cash. It was nice to get out of the hot Miami sun. Midday was a real bitch, even for your well-tanned types. Nash checked his watch, only to find it missing as well. A moment of confusion before the penny dropped.
He’d sold that too, to his superintendent, for a measly ten bucks.
Nash grabbed a jar of kosher dills and found himself inspecting his fingers instead of the pickles. They looked worn and leathery, flesh so dull it barely passed for pink. One of his thumbnails was a purplish black. Knuckles were scabbed too. Nash pressed on the discolored nail with the tip of his index. Throbs of pain drummed his nerve endings.
Did I shut that in a door or something? he thought, trying hard to remember. Did I deck someone?
No recollection. He replaced the jar on the shelf and that was when he caught the man looking. At the end of the aisle, standing in front of the shelves of canned soup, some dude was thoroughly checking him out. Nash scowled. The man turned his face away, void of expression.
“Not your type, fag,” Nash muttered, making a U-turn.
He found himself in the frozen food section, overly eyeing the tanned legs and cutoff shorts of a college coed to reaffirm his heterosexuality. She was tight and sweet, midriff bared and topped with a couple of candy apple tits in a tube top. Despite the sex appeal, she still had an air of innocence about her, as if she’d only accommodated a cock or two in her young life. That was the kind of girl Nash liked most, the almost-virgins, the ones you still had to show the ropes, toss around the bedroom a bit. He waited impatiently for his dick to chub in his pants. The erection never came.
Pick up some Viagra with my next order, he thought. Try Pablo, he might have some kicking around.
The girl felt Nash’s eyes on her and slipped away, leaving him staring at a stack of pizzas through a glass freezer door. He only had twenty bucks to spend on food for the week. His basket contained mostly instant noodles and canned soup. There were some oranges and carrots in there too: an oddity among the other goods, but a new necessity for Nash. A few weeks ago his pal Roon complained to a clinic nurse that his teeth felt like they were rotating in his gums. Turned out he’d come down with a case of scurvy due to the fact that he hadn’t eaten a fresh fruit or vegetable in months. Nash couldn’t remember the last time he had eaten anything nutritious either.
He wandered the frosted windows, perusing the microwave dinners and desserts. Most weren’t affordable, so Nash returned to the aisle of cheap shit where his admirer had been earlier, only to find him gone. He breathed a sigh of relief, dumped three cans of tuna into his basket, and headed for the checkout. As he joined the express line he made plans to swing a discount on his next score by offering one of his old acoustic guitars as collateral. That was when he noticed his admirer, still in the supermarket and still interested.
The guy stood in another line a few checkouts over, watching intently and holding a carton of milk. They made eye contact for three long seconds as Nash took in his details this time: crew cut, clean shaven, unfriendly manner, not an ounce of fat on the guy. There was a militant sense about him that Nash couldn’t ignore.
Narc, Nash thought. Fuck.
Nash was carrying. Not much, but enough on top of his existing record to get him put away in the realm of years, not months. The lady ahead of him paid for her groceries and left. Nash was being rung through. The double door exit was less than twenty yards to his right. He thought about making a run for it.
Not the front. They’ll have that covered.
Nash put his basket down on the conveyer belt and rolled his eyes.
“Jeez, I forgot milk,” he said to the checkout girl. “I’ll just grab it quick. It’s at the back, right?”
The checkout girl said nothing, only fluttered purple eyelids and chewed gum.
“Just gimme one sec.”
He moved quickly, past the line, down the aisle to the rear of the supermarket. A sign reading Employees Only on a metal door with a honeycombed porthole caught his attention. He breached it without a second thought, hearing a stock boy yell out after him for his violation. Nash was through the loading bay and out an emergency exit in seconds.
Don’t stop for one second, he thought. Don’t even dare.
Nash scrambled up the alleyway, dodging skids and jumping boxes, throwing glances over his shoulder the whole way. A panic he had not known before this day enveloped him.
Most helpful customer reviews
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful.
This book was cool. It felt like I was reading a movie ...
By StephC
This book was cool. It felt like I was reading a movie with how the timelines and scenes switched in each chapter. It kept my mind entertained and stimulated trying to keep up. Dark content and neat characters. The chapters are short so I constantly said to myself, "oh, just one more chapter." Worth reading if you like gruesome, gory, sex-related, violence, and military content. Oh, and Messum actually responded when I went to his website and wrote him a short email asking about Felix... :)
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful.
Jaws meets Train Spotting meets Lord of the Flies
By John Kenny
I think this is one of those books people will either love or hate. It seems that way from the reviews posted already. If you need likable characters and a happy ending; if you're averse to foul language and/or violence; and if you're unwilling to suspend disbelief then BAIT is not for you. And neither are a lot of other good books. If you like a well written thriller with lots of action, a really interesting premise and the darker side of humanity we all try to hide, then you'll enjoy this book.
Six junkies are kidnapped and stranded on an island surrounded by sharks. Withdrawal starts, nerves fray and the game is afoot. I couldn't help wondering what I would do. There are no "good guys". Desperate people do desperate things, and junkies are among the most desperate there are. I've known a few.
Great literature? Maybe not quite, but certainly a good spell-binding summer read.
15 of 19 people found the following review helpful.
Just when you thought it was safe to curl up with a "good?" book again?
By Laurence J. Coven
It starts with the Prologue. Well, where else would you put the prologue? So far so good.
A man is desperately swimming for his life. Trying to get to an island that lies just ahead. Behind him he can hear the hideous screams of his companions. They haven't done so well, but he tells himself he can make it, he knows he can. Then comes the first bump from something in the water. Then another. The something is big. He notices his right leg is not propelling him as strongly as it should. There is blood. His right foot is gone. He swims on determinedly. Then the left foot is gone. Not good. Apparently he does not have the resolve of the knight in Monty Python and the Holy Grail, who had virtually every appendage of his body lost in his battle, and yet never would give in. That was classic black comedy. This is not. Anyway, for our swimmer two feet is the limit. He disappears under the water, presumably to become shark food. "Nearby, beer bottles clinked, cigars burned, and significant money exchanged hands."
The next section is headed "Now". Just so you know, the story will be constantly flashing back, flashing forward, whatever. But not to worry the heading will always basically let us know where we are on the timeline.
The Premise: That's my heading, not his. In Miami, six junkies, two women and four men of varying age and ethnicity are captured knocked out and dumped on an island, probably in the Florida Keys. Eventually they come to. They are all strangers. What has happened to us?,they wonder. Wouldn't you? One of them actually says he thinks they're on an island in the Florida Keys to which Nash, the smartest one cleverly replies, "no s***, Sherlock". Gee you never know where a Sherlockian might turn up. Felix is an older grizzled black guy--a tough guy who used to be a fighter. When anyone even glances at him sideways he balls up his fists and gives them the death stare. He's sort of like an overly hyped up Red Foxx on "Sanford and Son". Then there's Ginger (don't worry there's not going to be a Gilligan though after awhile you may wish there was) a prostitute who sells her goodies for junk. She used to be a real looker, and is still attractive. She's not exactly a whore with a heart of gold--maybe zinc. She spits a lot to indicate her scorn for almost everybody else. She does feel a little motherly towards Kenny, the skinny young white kid whose only clothes are jeans and a torn tank top, even when before he was on the island. He's only just recently tasted the needle for the first time lead on by his friends. Of course he has been a needleless junkie and like Ginger sells his body for stuff. Also he whines a lot. You can tell because just before or after everything Kenny says are the words, "Whines Kenny," or "Kenny whined," And then there's Maude!--no just kidding. We come to Maria--the Hispanic--she claims she doesn't speak English but she does. Like Garbo, she wants to be left alone.
The last one to appear is Tallahassee Jones, a busker who plays on the boardwalk for change to get a fix. Just as he got enough to go get one from his dealer, Al Catraz (I am not kidding.), he is taken down by a couple of military types who stick a needle in his neck to put him out. Anyway, he appears on the island, and has found a trunk that nobody else seems to have noticed. In it is some food and water and a warning that they're being watched all the time, and that resistance is futile--wait a minute, they're not The Borg, my bad. Also, they are told there's another island about a mile away, and if they can get there, there will be more supplies and a stash of really "good s***". By now they're all going through various stages of withdrawal. Scratching their arms, their scabs, suffering stomach cramps, spitting up, vomiting and the like. But what is it they all have in common, they try to figure out. Oh, Could it be that they're all addicts? "Yeah, that's the ticket!"
For some reason at first they all think to try to swim to the next island is insane. They can't do that! But why? It's not like there's a storm out, and swimming a mile isn't that tough. Of course we know there's sharks there, but at first they don't--so there's no real reason not to try. Eventually Memphis City Jones goes nuts and gives it a try. Last to show-up, first to leave. They desperately try to stop him, still not knowing the shark situation. But they soon figure it out as Heidelberg Jones's body returns in itty bitty, bloody, gory pieces.
Now that they have a real reason not to try it, they decide to go. They're determined to stay together and watch each other's back. Maria apparently didn't get the memorandum for she brings a sharp stone with her and, in the water, cuts Kenny deeply on the arm. His blood brings on a profusion of sharks who rip Kenny's slender body from end to end while he keeps bobbing up, covered in blood, and brains, and gore, pleading for their help. It's a really disgusting scene which Messum will top several times. And we never know why Maria cut him except it was needed to spice up the action and kill off Kenny.
So the remaining four make it to the island where there are indeed supplies and some "really good s***." So they all get really high. But there's a note in the box about another island, yatta, yatta, yatta. Their persecutors have been keeping watch in a cruiser a ways out to make sure nothing goes wrong with their plan, whatever that is, and also to take film of the carnage. Hey maybe this is a new reality show for the Discovery Channel.
Anyway, it turns out that the persecutors (and I don't care if this is a spoiler or not, since there's essentially nothing here to spoil)are military types--ex-DEA agents who have decided that the real problem of drugs is on the demand side, and why not go about destroying all the worthless dregs of society who are users. It doesn't seem to be a really efficient way to go about cutting off the demand, but they don't seem to care. They have no empathy for addicts. The reader has virtually no empathy for the druggies. Even less so for the sadistic military types. The violence, gore, shredded flesh and levels of disgusting behavior to which the human spirit can sink are so ratcheted up by Messum, that the book itself becomes even scummier than its characters. I wish I could say that you could route for the sharks, but somehow Messum makes even nature's wildlife seem abhorrent.
I've been taking a few comic potshots at this book, just to try to get me through it. But the worst is the author's arrogant belief that he can damn whomever he wants without more than a pathetically slim effort to make us understand these characters as people or explore the social wrongs that are so clearly at issue here. Please don't get me wrong. I loved "Jaws", the movie, and was thrillingly scared by "The Exorcist", the book. They were classics that chilled your blood and made you confront the monster under your bed. "Bait" can't be mentioned in the same breath with them. Not even with some of the cheesy sequels that have been made of these classics. Some of them are at least camp. But here there is no humor. This is only pontificating, disgusting drek. If anyone asks you to buy or read "Bait", remember Nancy Reagan's advice: "JUST SAY NO!"
I received a free copy of this book from the publisher for review purposes.
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