Sunday, October 27, 2013

Pickers

Rusty stood back from the open engine compartment of the '72 Ford pick-up and admired his handiwork. It had taken almost 13 months to get the old truck restored and here it was, finally purring like a kitten. Well, it was running, anyway. Fiona would have to eat some major crow, he thought. What was it she said? Oh, yes, “You just wasted $500 on a piece of junk that will take up space in the garage FOREVER.”

“Hey, babe!” Rusty shouted through the open garage door. “Looks like FOREVER ended today!”

Fiona walked into the garage, pulling a vintage apron over her head. “What was that? Hey! Look at that! You actually got that damn thing running!”

Rusty stood in front of the truck with both hands on his hips, in a Superman pose. His patched overalls were thoroughly covered with grime, and the tattoos on his forearms were completely obscured by grease, all the way up to his elbows. He gathered up his long, red beard and tossed it back over his shoulder like a cape.

“I am HANDIMAN! Fixer of gadgets, repairer of gizmos, and restorer of classic Ford F-100's!”

Fiona rolled her eyes and moved in for a closer look at the old engine. “Well, Handiman, I'm thinking there must have been some divine intervention involved right here. That and the $2000 in new parts you finally had to spend.”

There it was. It only took Fiona about 30 seconds to bring up the money. She ALWAYS brought up the money. That was her thing. Rusty created and Fiona funded. Although it was a big reason why their relationship—both personal and business—was such a success, Fiona's focus on the money was a major source of irritation for Rusty. The implication that his art, creativity and craftsmanship should always consider the bottom line was exasperating and sometimes infuriating. This time, he was in such a good mood, he let it go without escalating into the usual argument.

Rusty knew why Fiona was so obsessed with money. She grew up dirt poor in a trailer park in Fontana, CA, the youngest of seven kids—fathered by five different men. Her mother was a reformed drug addict and all of Fiona's siblings spent a significant amount of their upbringing in foster care. Fortunately, Fiona's mom got into a 12 step program by the time her youngest was born, but it was never a happy, stable family life.

At seventeen, Fiona was “discovered” by a modeling agent while working at a Hot Dog on a Stick kiosk in the Fontana Fashion Mall. The agent, Mrs. Rumkey, was a typical modeling lesson scammer, but she had enough knowledge and sense to recognize the special quality that Fiona possessed—the quality that made the camera fall in love with her.

Success as a high fashion model provided Fiona with a ticket out of the trailer park, and when that brief career ended, her obsession with saving money and investing wisely kept her from ever returning to Fontana. World travel gave her a Continental flare and an eye for art. Living for years in hotel rooms provided a natural progression into her second career: Running high-end, artistically unusual, architecturally unique bed and breakfast venues.

Rusty was an artist. Not a painter or a sculptor in the traditional, classically trained sense. Rusty created his art from junk. Fiona often called him the “Dumpster Savant”. When most people would see nothing more than a rusting pile of old pipe, boilers and car parts, Rusty saw a fantastical, steampunk desk...or bunk beds...or hot tub. It wasn't difficult for Rusty. He literally grew up in a scrapyard. Homeschooled by his strictly religious mother, Rusty had few friends his own age and very few toys to play with. Possessing a seemingly limitless imagination and an endless supply of junk, Rusty started creating amazing contraptions and awesome Rube Goldberg-esque playthings before he was ten years old. By the time he was twenty, his incredible, repurposed artwork was getting national attention.

At six foot, four inches tall, and with a massive red beard that reached his belt buckle, Rusty was an imposing figure that many people shied away from at first introduction. Fiona only noticed his friendly blue eyes. The meeting was at one of Rusty's art installations. It was an full-size Spanish galleon—a pirate ship—made entirely from scrap metal. Fiona was amazed at the structure, but of course, her interest was mainly a financial one. She was looking for a unique, artistically unusual idea for the construction of the spa at her new B&B. Something steampunk—with real steam. Rusty's work seemed perfectly suited for the look she was hoping to achieve.

The spa project turned out to be more successful than Fiona had ever imagined. Rusty certainly had more inspiration than usual. He had fallen head over heels in love with his patron; a willowy, beautiful ex-model who was 10 years his senior. The spa was not only Rusty's finest artistic creation, it utilized the ultimate in green technologies and environmentally friendly resources. The B&B was featured in almost every major travel magazine, not to mention a piece in Time, and was an incredible financial victory in every way.

Fiona was equally taken with Rusty, and she would be the first to admit that his ability to make junk into large sums of money was a big factor in her initial attraction to him. He was also nothing like the feminine, narcissistic men she encountered in the fashion industry. Rusty was all man. He was big, strong, and he made things—useful things with his own hands. He was like a cross between King Midas, Paul Bunyan and Thor.

Fiona was also impressed with Rusty's honesty. Growing up surrounded by drunks and junkies made for some complicated trust issues that no amount of therapy could repair. There was something comforting—and oddly sexy—about a man incapable of telling an untruth. Fiona was also amazed by the fact that Rusty had absolutely no use for a mirror. She never saw him look in one, and when they first started dating, she couldn't even find one in his house. The fact that he was so ruggedly handsome and had no clue, made Fiona feel like she had a naughty, little secret that she would never have to share with anyone.

“Okay, Handiman, I'm going back inside to finish that shepherd's pie we're having for dinner. You better start getting cleaned up now...dinner's in an hour.”

“Come here and gimme a hug!” Rusty said with a drawl, lurching toward Fiona like Frankenstein. “HUGS!”

Fiona gave a playful scream and ducked under the greasy arms. “Use SOAP!”

Rusty stood back to admire his work for a few more minutes. The truck was a find, no matter what Fiona thought. The body was in almost perfect condition, even though a family of squirrels had taken up residence in the engine compartment for many years. Incredibly, there was barely a dent in the truck bed and hardly any rust.

The interior was another story. Squirrels, and probably rats, had chewed away the upholstery and most of the dashboard. It was and ugly mess and the restoration would probably cost another $1200. Rusty was a pro with a wrench or a wielding torch, but he'd never worked on car upholstery before. Nevertheless, he was confident he could make it look better than new.

Rusty turned off the engine and opened both of the cab doors. He decided to pull out the benchseat, just to see if any part of it was salvageable. The seat certainly didn't give any resistance when he pulled it free. It wasn't even bolted down. Several of the springs clattered onto the garage floor in a cloud of dust and rust when he set it down. Rusty bent down to inspect the area where the seat used to be. There were a number of old coins. $0.76 worth. Hey, Fiona will be glad to know about this little windfall, he mused.

There was also something else on the floorboards that the seat had been covering. Rusty picked it up for inspection. It was a dusty, old cigar box. Red Dot Cigars. 15 cents each. Wow, this was interesting, he thought. The box was tied shut by an old piece of jute twine. Rusty pulled out his pocket knife and cut off the string. He wondered what was inside. Clearly, the cigar box had been hidden there. For how long? Rusty gave the box a shake. There was definitely something in there.

Rusty decided to do the opening under a little more light. He placed the box on his workbench and turned on the trouble light that was hanging from the rafters. He was getting excited. This was the kind of thing that made picking worthwhile. Every once in a while, you uncovered a real treasure. A sudden twinge of guilt hit him. Fiona would probably enjoy the unveiling as much as he would. Maybe he should wait until after dinner, or go get her now.

“Hey, babe! Come out here and see what I found!” No response from the house. Fiona was probably in the bathroom. He headed inside to get her.

Trinkets

“Wait until you see this, sweetie, an old cigar box was hidden under the seat of the truck! Really old and tied up with twine!” Rusty wasn't good at hiding his enthusiasm. He was as excited as a little kid on Christmas morning.

Fiona followed Rusty into the garage, where they both were suddenly confronted by strong acrid fumes and a plume of heavy black smoke.

“Oh, my God, Rusty! Did you set the garage on fire again? What the hell?”

The smoke was emanating from glowing red embers on Rusty's workbench, from the very spot where he left the cigar box. Rusty bolted for the fire extinguisher that was hanging on the wall next to the garage door. He quickly sprayed the embers until they stopped glowing. Rusty was an old hand at putting out fires.

When the smoke and fire retardant cleared, Rusty was amazed to see there was absolutely nothing left of the cigar box. Only a black, greasy burn mark remained, along with two odd, metallic objects. Rusty bent down to pick up one of the objects, but found it was still hot to the touch.

“What the hell are those things?” queried Fiona. “Why did they catch on fire?

“I have know idea, babe, but they used to be in a cigar box,” Rusty was totally perplexed. He really wanted to take closer look but was naturally a bit apprehensive. What if the things were toxic or something? They'd already breathed in a good dose of nasty smoke.

Fiona started to cough. “Ack! That smoke is bad! I'll turn on the fans.” The garage workshop was very well-appointed with tools and adequate ventilation.

Rusty found a pair of wielding tongs and gingerly picked up one of the objects. He located a paint brush and dusted off the soot and fire retardant. It appeared to be an amulet or crest of some kind. It was flat and circular in shape, and about four inches in diameter—about the size of a large jar lid. The design was very intricate. It looked like an octopus, or some kind of squid. The face looked humanoid, with two large eyes.

“Babe, look at the eyes on this thing. Are those diamonds?”

Fiona moved in for a closer look. “Wow, if they are diamonds, this is a valuable piece of jewelry, Russ. They have to be at least three carats! What kind of metal is that?”

Rusty continued brushing at the black metal and tried to scratch it with his fingernail. “I've never seen anything like it. It's black, but it doesn't appear to be painted. It's too heavy to be gold.”

Fiona turned her attention to the second object. It was about the size and shape of a stick of butter. It appeared to be made of the same black metal, and the visible sides were covered with some kind of writing—runes, actually.

“Give me those tongs!” she snapped.

Rusty obeyed and Fiona poked at the object. She nearly jumped out of her skin when the thing emitted a buzzing noise and started to vibrate. The runes began to glow red, in contrast to the black metal surface.

“Holy fucking shit! This thing is alive! Rusty, get a box!”

Rusty searched around for something that would fill the bill. One thing for sure, it needed to be a fireproof box. That's when he remembered the little firesafe in the office. They only kept their passports and tax returns in it. Hey, if it kept fire out, maybe it could keep fire IN.

Rusty ran inside and returned with the firesafe. He held it open at the edge of the workbench and Fiona knocked the object inside. It glowed and buzzed furiously, until Rusty slammed the lid shut. After the box was closed, the noise suddenly stopped. Rusty shook the box. The object rattled lifelessly inside.

Rusty and Fiona looked at each for almost a full minute without speaking. Rusty went back to the other object that remained on the workbench—appropriately inanimate.

“This thing looks really, really old, Fiona. It's like an...artifact or something. We're talking real Indiana Jones kind of shit.”

Fiona shook her head. “I'm thinking more like Exorcist kind of shit.”

To be continued...

Saturday, October 26, 2013

Her Beautiful Man

In order to preserve your self-respect, it is sometimes necessary to cheat and lie.
~ Robert Byrne

It wasn't that Cheryl didn't love Martin. He was once her very best friend, but marrying him had been a big mistake. Martin worked hard and made a decent living at the software company, but there was just no passion in their relationship. She thought she could learn to get over the twinge of disgust she felt whenever Martin touched her. Father Dutton said that with time the passion would come, but he certainly turned out to be the wrong person to ask. What could a pedophile priest know about passion between a man and a grown-up woman? Of course, no one knew about Father Dutton's unwholesome proclivities, until he was literally caught with his pants down.

The latte she picked up at the drive-thru espresso bar tasted like dirt. Cheryl wondered why she continued to patronize the place—the quality of the beverages was so hit-and-miss. She considered going back and complaining, but she was in a hurry. That's where they get you, she thought. Everyone is in such a hurry that nobody goes back and complains. Besides, the barista with all the facial piercings looked like the kind of kid who would spit in your coffee if you complained, and she certainly didn't want that.

She checked her make-up in the rearview mirror. Cheryl was quickly approaching her 24th birthday, but she still had the youthful appearance of a teenager, especially when she had her hair up in a ponytail. What did Martin say this morning? “You know, I read that a woman is twice as likely to be raped if she has her hair in a ponytail.” What an ass, she thought. He didn't even look up from his computer screen—too busy playing World of Warlocks. She had gotten up in a particularly good mood, and her husband had to throw in his typical morning buzzkill. She silently responded to his admonition with her middle finger. He didn't see it. He had goblins to kill.

She adjusted the mirror and turned her head to the side. The star shaped tattoos behind her right ear were visible whenever she put her blond hair up. As much as she hated to admit it, her mother had been right; Cheryl regretted getting the tattoos, especially since Martin had an identical set on his neck. They had just turned 18 and Martin talked her into getting the body decorations as a permanent declaration of their friendship. Now, the tattoos seemed more like a brand—a symbol that she was forever Martin Miller's property.

In spite of the tattoos, she was satisfied with her appearance. She was wearing a new bodysuit that showed off her perfect little figure. She wondered if he was going to be in the gym this morning. He hadn't been in for several days and she was beginning to fear that he had moved away or found another place to work out. Walking toward the main entrance of The Body Shop, she was delighted to see him on the Stairmaster: her Beautiful Man.

Jack Benson, Jr. was the undisputed leader of his amateur cycling club: The Portland Cyclones. A natural athlete, like his father and grandfather before him, he was born with the body of a Greek god. He had just finished an early morning ride with his exclusive set of training buddies, but he felt he still needed to work out a few kinks in his quadriceps. The Tour of Cascadia was coming up in three short weeks and Jack wanted to make sure he was more than ready for the contest. The Tour was the home field race, so to speak, and a member of the Cyclones had brought home the yellow jersey every year for the past three. An hour on the Stairmaster was just what was needed, according to the complicated training schedule he had devised for himself.

Jack noticed the cute little blond the minute she walked into the gym. He had noticed her several times before, in fact. This morning she was wearing a red leotard that left very little to the imagination. Great, he thought. I'm already having a hard enough time concentrating on my workout. She was showing her ID to the girl at the front desk, and he had a perfect, unobstructed view of her tight little frame. She certainly did have a gorgeous body. She looked young, though, maybe 17 or 18. “Seventeen will get you twenty,” he said aloud.

“What was that?” said the pinch-faced matron on the next Stairmaster over. Jack was listening to his iPod and didn't realize how loudly he'd spoken.

“Oh, nothing. It's just a rap tune I'm listening to. Sorry.” Jack pointed to his headphones. The older woman scowled at him disapprovingly.

“That misogynistic garbage is demeaning and promotes violence against women...”

“Sorry, I can't hear you. Headphones.” Jack pointed toward his ears again. “Seventeen will get you twennie—bumpin' wit you hunnie!” His rap was atrocious.

The woman gave a loud “Humph!” and went back to watching a soap opera on the flat screen monitor mounted on the wall.

During the exchange, Jack had lost sight of the cute blond. When he looked up again, he was surprised to see her climbing onto the treadmill directly in front of him. Great, he thought. This workout is going to be totally worthless.

Cheryl prayed that she had gotten her Beautiful Man's attention. It was worth the sneer the girl at the counter gave her. Of course, she knew wearing a skin-tight body suit to the gym was ridiculous, and every woman in the place was looking at her like she was some kind of pariah. Screw them. As she trotted on the treadmill, she wondered what he was thinking. Is he looking at me? She was certain that he had noticed her on previous occasions. They shared a smile at the drinking fountain the other day and she hated herself for being too timid to say hello.

What was she doing? She was a married woman—a newlywed, really. She had taken a vow to honor and cherish Martin, and here she was parading around in a revealing outfit that she had purchased for the sole purpose of attracting another man. Her cheeks suddenly flushed, but not from shame. She was excited and the thought that her plan may be working gave her a thrill that she had never before experienced.

Cheryl started to get restless. This is taking too fucking long, she thought. When is this guy going to make a move? She decided to take matters into her own hands. What the hell, here goes nothing.

Cheryl dropped her towel onto the running treadmill and it shot backwards. With near-perfect choreography, she reached back for the towel and pretended to stumble. One step, two steps, three steps back. With a stylish pirouette, she reached the back of the treadmill and was looking directly into her Beautiful Man's gorgeous hazel eyes. “Oh! Excuse me! How embarrassing!” she exclaimed, as she crashed landed against the Stairmaster.

“Whoa! Are you okay?”

“Oh, I think...I think I hurt my ankle.” Cheryl limped away from the machines, and Jack was off the Stairmaster taking her arm. It worked.

“Hey, let me give you a hand.”


Game Time

“Oh, honey, are you sure you don't mind? I haven't seen Becky since graduation, and this little trip to Cannon Beach sounds like soooo much fun. Just us girls rummaging through the antique stores...” Martin interrupted Cheryl with a grunt and a dismissive wave. He was busy leading a raiding party against a clan of Orcs that had been giving everyone in his guild a hard time for the past two days.

Son of a bitch, she thought. I could be standing here butt-naked and he wouldn't even notice. Jack would notice, though—boy, would he notice.

Cheryl felt no love for her husband at that moment and absolutely no regrets about the romantic rendezvous she was planning with Jack. They had reservations at the Sea Breeze Inn and Spa. Every room came complete with a custom hot tub and a king-size bed. Three days in a private room with Jack's sculpted, athletic body—her nipples tightened at the thought.

Of course, Jack had a bike race on Saturday morning. She would spend most of the day browsing through the quaint shops in town. Jack would bring back the trophy and Cheryl would give her champion a special prize that night.

“What the fuck is up with you? Are you high or something?” Cheryl was so engrossed in her fantasy that she didn't notice Martin get up from his computer chair. He was carrying a beer and a bag of Flamin' Hot Cheetos, and was on his way back from the kitchen.

“Huh?” was the only reply Cheryl could muster, as the vision of her lover's muscular form slowly faded from her mind.

“Huh? I swear to God, Cheryl, you are a total numbnuts. I asked you three fucking times to get me a beer and you just sat there with that dumbass grin on your face. Don't go spending all of my money at those fruity antique stores. I can tell that's what you're dreaming about. We can't afford that kind of bullshit right now.” Martin interrupted his own tirade with a loud belch.

Martin was wearing threadbare flannel pajama bottoms that had probably last seen the inside the washing machine a month ago. His “Black Goat of the Woods” t-shirt hadn’t been off his torso for three days. He had never been a handsome man, and the thirty extra pounds of pudge that he’d added to his mid-section over the past few years did little to improve his appearance. Cheryl couldn’t believe she shared the same bed with this slob.

“I'm paying for this trip with my own money, you asshole!”

“Yeah, like you ever made any money on your own. You've been livin' on somebody else's dime your whole life.” Martin put on his headset and parked himself in front of his computer monitor again. Leaning back in his chair, his too-small t-shirt hiked up over his hairy gut. He absent-mindedly picked a large piece of lint out of his navel, brought it to his nose for a sniff, and summarily flicked it to the floor.

“Red Leader 6, this is Blue Leader 3. Looks like you took out that nest of Orcs over in sector 19, but they're regrouping in the Shadowlands. FUCK! Didn't you see those guys coming up the battlement on the north tower? STUPID FUCKERS! I can't even get up to get myself a beer! Thanks a lot, Cheryl, you stupid ditz!”

Cheryl started to answer with a few epithets of her own, but she realized that he couldn't hear her over the Orcs' battle cry. Martin was right about the money, she thought, but he didn't have to be such a dick about it. He made good money as a computer programmer—more than enough to furnish their apartment with something better than the IKEA crap he loved so much. It was his idea that she move in with him and quit her job at the restaurant. He didn't like the idea of her parading around in that skimpy uniform. He was obsessively jealous and possessive before they got married—now, he didn't give a crap what she did. Well, she'd be doing Jack this weekend. What do you think about that, you chubby fuck? Cheryl smiled and kept the thought to herself.

“I'm going out, jerk. I'll be back by dinner.”

“Hey! If you're going to the store, bring back some more Cheetos and a 12 pack of PBR. Some of the guys from work are coming over for a LAN party tonight. Remember—PABST. I don't want those cheap-ass losers drinking up all the good beer. DAMN IT! Reggie! Didn't I tell you to move those archers into position at the gate! FUCK! We're all going to get killed by that Uber-Demon again! You prick! You're out of the guild! Go back to level 50, you butthole!”

As soon as she was out the door, Cheryl ran to her car; mainly to escape Martin's loud, expletive-filled droning, but also to get to Jack's apartment before he got home from work. She had new g-string panties on and was eager to see the look on his face when she peeled off her jeans. Martin could go to the store and pick up his own goddamn beer.

Cheryl found the key to Jack's apartment just where he said it would be—behind the fichus in the corner of the landing. When she started to put the key in the lock, the door slowly moved inward. It had been slightly ajar. Jack must have forgotten to close it all the way. That's not like him, she thought.

“Hello?” Cheryl found herself feeling very tentative about going any farther than the entryway. “Jack? Are you home, honey?” There was no answer. Cheryl left the front door open and slowly entered the living room. From there, she could see most of the one bedroom apartment. “Hello?”

A quick check of the bedroom and bathroom satisfied Cheryl's apprehension. There wasn't anyone lurking about inside Jack's place, and everything appeared to be in proper order. She shut the door and situated herself on the couch. She tousled her hair and reapplied her lipstick. What the hell, she thought, as she pulled off her sweater and jeans. I'll make sure Jack is really glad to see me. What a perfect surprise for her Beautiful Man.

Jack's apartment wasn't the typical bachelor pad. It was tastefully decorated—he admitted to paying a professional to do the job—and there wasn't a single piece of cheap, Swedish furniture to be found. Of course, the prints on the wall depicted sports and outdoor scenes, but they were behind glass and in expensive frames. Martin's idea of room decoration consisted of a WWE poster pinned up with two rusty thumbtacks.

Cheryl picked up a newspaper and glanced through the headlines for a few minutes. She checked her watch—5:15. Jack was usually home by five sharp. What could be keeping him? She exchanged the paper for a copy of GQ that had been carefully positioned on the coffee table and switched on the faux Tiffany lamp.

She was starting to feel stupid and self-conscious lying around in her underwear. She went to the desk to get the cordless phone. That's when she noticed that the computer was on. A session of World of Warlocks was running on the 24 inch LCD monitor. What the fuck?, she thought. Jack never plays computer games. That's a Martin thing... She felt a sick turning begin in the pit of her stomach. There was a yellow stickie note on the screen. Written in deliberate block letters: PLAY ME, OR LOVER BOY DIES.

Suddenly, the phone rang. Cheryl screamed. Her twitching fingers hovered above the handset. What if it's Jack? What if it's...someone else? The realization that Jack may be in trouble and in need of help pushed Cheryl beyond her fear. She picked up the phone and forced herself to take a breath. “H-hello?”

“Sit down and put on the headphones, bitch.” The voice sounded mechanical, as though it was being disguised by some kind of electronic device. Cheryl felt another scream start to well up from her solar plexus, but she managed to somehow keep it inside.

“Who the hell is this? Marty? I know it's you, you BASTARD! What did you do to JACK?”

“What did you do to JACK?” The voice mocked her with robotic sarcasm, followed with a sinister, tinny laugh. “I don't know anything about any Marty, but I know your pretty boyfriend won't live another minute unless you sit down and put on those headphones, Cheryl. And don't even think about doing anything stupid. I'm watching you.” Cheryl turned toward the window. The drapes were drawn.

“I know what you're thinking. The curtains can't keep me from seeing you. Those sure are some skimpy panties you're almost wearing. Does your husband know that you're running around practically naked in another man's apartment?”

Cheryl instantly felt violated. He could see her—but how? There had to be a hidden camera somewhere in the room. That would be no problem for Martin to install. He was a freaky genius with everything electronic. Cheryl grabbed a throw that had been carefully draped across the back of the couch and tossed it over her shoulders.

“Hey, that's not fair. I was enjoying the view,” said the voice. “I guess I'll just have to be satisfied with this...” Instantly, the computer screen switched to a video of two naked bodies undulating on a four-poster bed—Jack's bed. It took a minute for Cheryl to recognize the people engaging in the exceptionally athletic love-making session.

“You FUCKER, Marty! Stop this right now! You're SICK! What did you do to Jack?”

“What did you do to JACK? Wah! You're such a whiner, Cheryl. Really, I don't know how Marty puts up with your incessant hissy-fits, and then there's the whole cheating whore thing... most fellows find that to be a big turn-off. But I digress—SIT DOWN AND PUT ON THE HEADPHONES!”

Cheryl tried to think of a way to summon help, but quickly decided she was out of options. She knew she could simply run from the apartment and call the police, but something told her that if she did, Jack would never come home again. She sat down at the computer desk and put on the headphones. “Now what?”

As soon as the words passed her lips, a computer animated character walked onto the screen in front of her. She had watched Martin play World of Warlocks enough to recognize the pudgy figure of a Witcher Guide, elf-like creatures charged with escorting newbs—newcomers to the game—through the first 10 experience levels.

“Greetings, harlot! I am Doritrios the Elder, and I've been expecting you!” The pudgy male figure changed into a scantily clad female and then into a black cat. Witcher Guides had the annoying ability to morph into any character or object. Cheryl had almost forgotten how irritating they could be. “Are you ready for your first quest?” the cat purred.

A dialog box appeared on the screen: Accept Quest? Below the question, there were two checkboxes marked simply: YES and NO.

Cheryl checked yes and the screen went momentarily blank. When it came back on, Cheryl found herself watching a cut-scene video. A young man on a white stallion was proceeding alone into a dark forest. Behind a large boulder at the end of the path, two ogres could be seen laying in wait for him. Cheryl couldn't help noticing that the muscular, regal young man looked a great deal like a computer-animated version of Jack.

“Prince Jacobian looks a lot like your sweetie-pie, doesn't he?” hissed the tinny voice through the headphones. “Watch what happens next!”

As the prince approached the ambush, his horse let out a tentative snort and stopped a few steps in front of the boulder. “Onward, Klapacius! We have demons to slay!”

“What a dumbass!” said Cheryl's tormentor. “His horse has more sense than he does!” Instantly, the ogres sprang forth from their hiding places and approached the prince.

The camera aspect of the screen moved back and slightly upward. Cheryl recognized that the game had entered battle mode. She would now have to engage in some selective strategy to defeat the ogres, using weapons, magic spells or any special powers her character had come across during quests. The Weapons Menu opened and Cheryl was disappointed to see the prince was only equipped with the most rudimentary sword and a mace. There were no spells in the Magic Menu. This would be a difficult fight. The ogres both had heavy armor and huge battleaxes.

Cheryl selected the mace and directed her mouse at the ogre with the blue armor. The prince took two looping swings and missed both times. The ogre's ax hit it's mark solidly, however, and the prince's Lifeforce Meter instantly dropped to half. The red ogre advanced quickly and his single blow killed the prince immediately.

“Oh, that was a terrible effort,” said the tinny voice, sounding truly disappointed. “I really thought you'd defeat at least one of the ogres.”

“FUCK, YOU, ASSHOLE!” was the only reply Cheryl could manage. “Only nerds play these pathetic RPG's!”

“That may be true,” hissed the voice. “But losing this game has some serious consequences...”

The computer screen went blank for a moment and then displayed a video of a man duct-taped to a chair. The chair was situated in a corner constructed of cinder block walls. Rusty pipes jutted from the ceiling. A basement? Cheryl didn't recognize the room. A large piece of duct-tape covered the man's mouth, but even with the face partially obscured, Cheryl did recognize him.

“Jack! Oh, my God, Jack! What the hell are you doing to him?”

The camera registered the shadow of a door opening and closing just out of range. There was a look of wide-eyed terror on Jack's face and he began struggling violently against his bonds. Cheryl soon found out why.

A stocky man wearing a hockey mask entered the frame. He was also wearing a filthy, blood-stained butcher's apron, black rubber gloves, and carrying what appeared the be a rusty hacksaw.

“No! What the fuck? What are you doing, you crazy bastard?” Cheryl was hysterical. “WHAT ARE YOU DOING TO JACK?”

The man in the hockey mask grabbed Jack's right index finger and jerked it upward toward the ceiling and then back further toward his wrist. The hand was taped to the arm of the chair with what appeared to be a half roll of duct-tape. All of Jack's fingers were exposed and vulnerable. The index finger was obviously broken when it was bent backward. Jack's whole body shook with spasms of pain.

Suddenly, with Cheryl still dumbfounded by the assault she had just witnessed, the man in the mask went to work on Jack's finger with the hacksaw. It only took half a dozen furious swipes with the blade to remove the digit. Blood showered the hockey man's apron and splashed across the floor. Jack's silenced scream was still evident in his frantic, ever-widening eyes.

A large, tiger-striped dog entered the frame. Cheryl recognized it as a Bullmastiff. Marty hated dogs. He was actually quite terrified of them. A German Shepard bit him in the face when he was nine years old and he still had visible scars from the attack. No way was Jack's torturer Marty.

The man in the mask whistled a command and the monster of a dog stood obediently at attention. With a quick flick of his wrist, the man tossed Jack's finger to the dog. The Bullmastiff was clearly well-trained and exceedingly well-practiced at the trick. He didn't miss the catch, and the finger was devoured instantly.

Cheryl screamed for what seemed like an eternity. This just couldn't be happening. Some degenerate was forcing her to play a video game and the penalty for losing was having to watch her lover get hacked to pieces and fed to a dog... The computer screen went blank and Cheryl felt like she was going to pass out.

“Shush, shush, shush, you stupid little twat. If you don't shut up and calm yourself, the next thing I'm taking is lover boy's HEAD.”

To be continued...

Friday, October 25, 2013

Thunderstones

Prelude

It was a bad night for a bicycle ride. But, the twins had never learned to drive and no one at the church had offered to give them a lift to the rosary. They had no other option but to don their identical yellow rain slickers and pedal the five miles to St. Anthony’s.

To the locals, it was a familiar sight. The twins had been riding their bikes rain or shine on the streets of Amberton for over three decades. Many residents had witnessed them grow up—those retarded twins who seemed destined to remain in eternal childhood.

Most people recognized them as the twin bag boys at Benson’s on Main Street. Those who attended St. Anthony’s Church knew a bit more about them. They were from a big Catholic family. The dad was a popular football coach. The mom worked at the church rectory. The oldest brother was a renowned pediatric oncologist. The youngest sister was valedictorian of her class at Stanford.

At 22, Cheryl Miller grew up seeing the twins almost every day of her life. Seeing them on their bikes—always riding single file with a four to five foot distance between them—was both amusing and comforting. As an only child, she wondered what it would be like to have an identical partner in life.

As Cheryl sat at the intersection waiting to turn left, it seemed much later than 6:30 PM. The sky was black and the rain was coming down hard. When she saw the twins approaching on the other side of the busy intersection, she immediately felt an unusual wave of dread. Their yellow slickers were whipping in the cold winter rain. Both were pedaling hard yet moving at an unusually slow pace.

Suddenly, the rhythm of the rain was interrupted by the bass of a stereo system. The truck didn’t even hesitate at the red light. The twins had just entered the intersection as the shadowy vehicle roared past her.

“NO!” she screamed. But, no one could hear her. The truck struck the lead twin dead on. Both the bicycle and the rider were propelled down the dark, wet street. The truck pulled forward slowly, stopped for a moment beside the lump of yellow vinyl in the street, and then sped away.

When the police draped the body with a sheet, Cheryl knew that one of the twins was dead and the other one’s life would never be the same. It was easy for her to ignore her own horror knowing that a single careless act had caused so much damage. The surviving twin sat all alone on the curb, tightly clutching his brother’s slicker and rocking back and forth. She tried to talk to him, but he was clearly inconsolable. The cops couldn’t even get him to sit in a cruiser out of the rain. Back and forth, back and forth. The rocking was really starting to creep her out.

Cheryl waited almost 30 minutes to give her statement to the police officer.

“All I can remember is that it was a large, black truck. The driver was listening to Bad Brain's Pay to Cum. And, oh yeah, there was a big Batman sticker on the rear window.”



Who’ll Stop the Rain?

Still falls the rain - dark as the world of man, black as our loss - blind as the nineteen hundred and forty nails upon the Cross.
~Edith Sitwell

Rain. After seven straight months of drought, it had to rain tonight. Leslie pressed his forehead against the window of the 737 and stared despondently at the lights flashing across the wet tarmac. It was very dark and the water on the window made it difficult to tell how hard it was coming down. A couple of baggage handlers hurried past in yellow slickers. It looked nasty out there. The thought of waiting for the shuttle bus and the long soggy trek through Parking Lot B solidified his bad mood. Exactly where did he park his car? Was it in section 2 or 3? He’d written it down on the envelope that contained his original plane ticket, but that disappeared somewhere in the hotel room.

Thinking about the hotel instantly made Leslie itch. He tried to inconspicuously scratch his arms and chest through his JC Penney dress shirt. The Rubenesque woman in the seat next to him noticed and attempted to shift her ample ass a little farther away—about 1 cm was all she could achieve. Leslie felt offended by the attitude he discerned from the woman’s posture. After all, he had to endure a four hour flight with her elbows poking over into his seat area. Plus, she smelled like Vicks Vapo-Rub. Stupid broad in an ugly polyester pantsuit. Where did she get off? Leslie started scratching with unabashed vigor.

“Bedbugs,” he said with a sneer. His seatmate let out an audible gasp and tried to eke out another millimeter of distance between them.

Her squirming amused Leslie for a minute or two, but his thoughts soon turned back to the cause of his current pruritus. How could you get bitten by bedbugs at a five star hotel? The room looked immaculate and The Chateau Ricard has a stellar reputation. Leslie’s company usually did not provide such ritzy accommodations, but with a convention in town, there were no reasonably priced rooms available. Leslie certainly couldn’t afford the place on his salary—less child support—and he was quite pleased with his good fortune. Three nights at a boring sales conference were transformed into a holiday. Of course, something had to ruin it all. The concierge was quick to apologize and offered a full refund for the night, no questions asked—it didn’t seem like the first time he’d dealt with the issue, that’s for sure. Apparently, there was some kind of nationwide bedbug epidemic. At least that’s what Jane in H.R. said when he informed her about his vermin-inflicted rash.

“Oh, that is disgusting!” she exclaimed. “The same thing happened to Joe Bennett at that seminar in Reno last month, and he was staying at the Rolling Hills Inn.”

Other than her condolences, Jane had nothing more to offer. She was totally useless—incompetent, actually. Leslie was thinking about the child support order she botched up. Payroll had been taking out twice as much money as the order required. It took Jane two months to correct the error, and when he asked for his money back, Jane informed him that he would have to get it from his ex. Of course, that would be like trying to get blood from the proverbial stone. Jane expressed faux sympathy, but indicated quite clearly through her inaction that she had no true remorse or any intention to do the right thing.

“I’m sorry, but there’s nothing more I can do.”

When Leslie tried to press the issue, he was quickly reproached by his boss, Rick, who just so happened to be banging Jane’s younger sister, Becky.

“I’m concerned about your…career, Leslie. We have to make sure that we get along with all of our co-workers. You know, good customer service starts right here in-company. Blah, blah, blah.”

Rick was the epitome of the absentee manager. He delegated all of his own work and ruled the department with a Draconian fist. A handsome, athletic, divorced 48 year old, he had two goals in life: play as much golf on the company dime as possible, and bed every attractive and semi-attractive female in the clerical pool. So far, Rick had been quite successful in achieving both goals.

Leslie often wondered what Rick was like in high school. He could picture him strutting across campus in his letterman’s jacket, winking at cheerleaders, running his thick fingers through his thick chestnut hair, and taking every opportunity to bully a weakling—a weakling like Leslie used to be in high school. How many swirlies and wedgies did Rick mercilessly deliver to freshmen? They had to number in the thousands. Of course, the boss still metes out the wedgies with regularity, but now they’re in memo form. Jerk.

It took too long to get off the plane. People were milling about like they had all the time in the world. Ms. Pantsuit had a great deal of difficulty pulling her bag down from the overhead. It was clearly too large to be a carry-on. Leslie wondered why they didn’t make her check it. The damn thing is probably stuffed with four dozen identical pantsuits, he thought. The woman let out a loud fart while giving her steamer trunk the final tug down. Her ass was aimed right in the face of a boy of about six or seven.

“Gross!” shouted the boy, contorting his face and furiously waving his hand in front of his nose. “That lady FARTED in my FACE, mom!”

Leslie laughed out loud and Ms. Pantsuit shot him a nasty look. Leslie shrugged his shoulders and smiled. “That’s why I always refuse the peanuts. They cause gas.” The woman’s only response was another nasty look.

Leslie reached into his pocket and retrieved his cell. Other passengers were already chatting away on their phones. Clearly, they did not wait until landing to turn them on. Leslie wondered if they really did cause problems with the operation of the plane or if that was just some bullshit the airlines put out to scare people into behaving in-flight. Talking on the phone in an enclosed area is just bad manners, he thought. Who wants to listen to some bitch prattle on about her pap smear results six inches from your ear? In any case, he just wanted to check to see if he’d missed any calls. He did. There were two calls from his son. He would wait until he was in the terminal to check his messages.

At the arrival gate, Ms. Pantsuit was hugging her equally unattractive husband, or boyfriend. What a surprise, he was also wearing polyester. When the woman saw Leslie, she pointed in his direction. Her husband squinted toward him but clearly couldn't figure out who his lady was trying to identify in the crowd. They went back to hugging, and Leslie called his voice mail.

“Hello, Dad, it’s me Caleb. I just wanted to let you know that Batman has been parked in your parking space the entire time you've been out of town. I told the landlord, but they didn't do anything about it. Sorry, it’s pouring here and there’s no place to park. Hope you had a good trip. See you when you get home.”

“Goddamn BATMAN!” muttered Leslie, as he headed out of the terminal, into the rain.


Hi, Neighbor

He who is drowned is not troubled by the rain.
~ Chinese proverb

The 101 was a mess of slowly moving taillights for as far as the eye could see. It took almost 3 hours to travel the 60 miles from the airport to Leslie’s Amberton apartment.

“That son of a bitch, Batman,” Leslie cursed aloud. “Asshole keeps parking in my parking spot every time I’m out of town.”

Leslie didn't know what pissed him off more: the fact that Batman parked in his assigned spot, or that the jerk-off kept tabs on his comings and goings enough to know exactly when the space was vacant. Leslie had never actually seen the owner of the big, black Ford F-350 in the flesh. He knew that he was a Batman fan from the winged sticker on the rear window. Batman was also an In-N-Out Burger aficionado. Leslie knew this not only from the bumper sticker on the truck, but from the pile of fast food garbage that the scumbag had left behind the last time he commandeered the space.

As he drew closer to home, the thought of the F-350 sitting in his parking spot made Leslie more and more agitated. He imagined that Batman was likely a muscle-bound, goateed, wife-beater-wearing redneck. He clearly had a small dick, judging from the size of his truck and his anti-social behavior. Batman had to be compensating for something.

Leslie also imagined all the things he could do to Batman’s vehicle, should it be sitting where it did not belong when he arrived home. A little sugar in the gas tank for you, Caped Crusader? How about some holes in those expensive tires, Dark Knight? Leslie had once read on a website that some raw chicken parts blended with milk could be carefully poured into the outside air vents of a car. After the mixture sat rotting in the air ducts for a few days, the stench inside the car would be unbearable—and irreversible. The thought brought a little smirk to his otherwise scowling face.

Leslie’s apartment was in an up-scale building. The rent was high, but it was conveniently located near his office. All residents of the Tierra Linda Apartments received an assigned parking space under a carport. A single-car garage could be had for an extra $100 a month. Leslie didn't see any sense in spending $100 to put three walls and a door around his Toyota Prius. It was far from a luxury vehicle, and besides, he didn't have a spare Ben Franklin to throw around.

Leslie’s assigned spot was at the end of a carport and was considerably wider than the others. He postulated that was the likely reason Batman preferred to park his dually there. It was almost wide enough to accommodate the ostentatious monster of a truck.

It was still raining steadily when Leslie rolled into the complex. It was almost midnight and he wanted nothing more than to throw his suitcase through the front door and stagger off to bed. But there it was—in parking space G-13—the goddamn Batmobile. “Motherfucker!” Leslie stopped his Prius and stared at the truck for a full fifteen minutes, and then he took an angry spin through the parking lot in search of a free spot. Of course, with the rain and the late hour, there wasn't an empty spot in the entire complex.

There was a space out on the street, a full block away from Leslie’s apartment. Cursing all the way, Leslie lugged his suitcase out of the trunk and headed for his front door. The rain actually started to come down harder as soon as Leslie began walking. It was pouring down in sheets, and in less than a minute, he was soaked to the skin. The foul weather gear he’d brought with him on his trip was a thin windbreaker and that was buried somewhere at the bottom of his suitcase.

By the time he got to his apartment, Leslie was angrier than he had ever been in his life. It was worse than the time in sixth grade when Steve Chesik stole his Halloween mask. That little bastard got a pencil jammed through the palm of his hand as payback. Batman was clearly looking for some of the same treatment. Leslie really wanted to hurt somebody—bad. Standing at his door, keys in hand, he glowered at the truck in his parking spot. Through the rain, he thought he saw a figure standing behind the F-350’s front fender. It was difficult to see clearly, but it looked like somebody wearing a yellow rain slicker.

“Hey! Hey you! Is that your truck, asshole? You’re in my fucking parking spot!” Leslie started moving quickly toward the figure in the slicker. Whoever it was retreated behind the truck. “Hey! I’m talking to you, shithead!”

Leslie ran completely around the vehicle, but he found no one anywhere near it. Had he imagined seeing the man in the raincoat? He bent down and looked underneath the truck—nothing there but wet asphalt. He couldn't have gotten past him without being seen. “Maybe he really is Batman,” Leslie said out loud to the rain. He was answered by a loud clap of thunder.

Leslie paused for a moment when he noticed that the Batmobile had been recently wounded. The deep white scratches, mangled grill, and broken headlight, were evidence that the truck had certainly been in an accident of some kind. He ran his hand along the grooves in the black surface of the hood—paint transfer.

Leslie’s first real job out of college was as an insurance adjuster for Old Farm Insurance. He spent three miserable years investigating auto accidents of all kinds, from fender benders to deadly head-on collisions. During that time, he found interpreting the physical evidence to be pretty easy. He’d lost count of the number of times people claimed to have hit a deer only to find the transfer of reflective paint and sharply creased dents that could only have come from a collision with a road sign.

He was already sure the Batmobile had not hit a sign or another vehicle. Whatever it had struck left behind nearly six inches of damage and matte paint before being propelled forward by the impact. It was all about physics. Equal and opposite reactions and all that shit.

Leslie knelt down to get a better look at the chrome grill. The horizontal metal strips had been twisted and broken by something of equal strength—metal on metal. Wedged between the pieces of jagged chrome, he found a triangular piece of fabric. It appeared to be canvas coated on one side with yellow vinyl. No. The Batmobile had not hit a deer—unless deer wear yellow raincoats.

Then, he noticed that the truck’s passenger side door was slightly open and the cabin light was on. He opened the door all the way and looked around inside. The truck’s interior was a pigsty, littered with fast food wrappers and empty energy drink cans. It smelled like a mixture of cigarette smoke, piss and beer. “Well, no surprises, here, you filthy fuck,” Leslie grunted.

Leslie climbed up into the cab, hesitating for only a moment when confronted with the disgusting mess inside. What the hell, he thought. He couldn't pick up anything worse than the bedbugs from The Chateau Ricard. He opened the glove box and immediately found the vehicle registration—and a 9 mm handgun. “Well, well, well. I guess bad boys really do have bad toys,” he said, recalling another stupid sticker affixed to the Batmobile’s rear bumper. Leslie pushed the gun into his waistband and held up the registration for closer inspection. Apartment number 609 was going to have an unexpected visitor this rainy evening.



Retribution

Never attempt to murder a man who is committing suicide.
 ~ Woodrow Wilson

Buckley Dennison was in bad shape. He was alternately shoving his shaved head under a running kitchen faucet and taking huge swigs from an extra large Monster energy drink. Buckley needed to sober up fast. He’d just killed a man; of that much he was certain. What he didn't know was what the hell to do next. How long does it take for your blood alcohol level to get back down to normal? He didn't feel drunk at the moment, but he was pretty sure a Breathalyzer test would give him a ticket straight to the State Penitentiary for a very long time.

Buckley toweled off his scalp with a filthy dishrag and staggered over to the window. He pulled the blinds apart slightly and peered out at the rain-soaked parking lot. His truck was still parked in his neighbor’s spot. He hoped the owner of the fruity little Prius would be out of town for another night, but he didn't really care that much. What could that pussy do about it, anyway?

He could call the cops. The thought worried Buckley for a minute then he remembered that the Amberton P.D. rarely responded to complaints about stolen parking spaces and loud music. They had more important things to deal with—like search for a hit-and-run driver. Maybe no one got a good look at him, he thought. That woman in the Mustang looked right at him, though. She might have even gotten his license plate number. No…if she got the plate number, he’d already be going through processing at the County Jail. But, she probably gave the pigs a really good description.

Batman! Buckley had a brief moment of clarity and a sinking feeling in the pit of his stomach. There’s no way the bitch missed his Batman sticker. He had to get that thing off his truck tonight. Why did he put that thing on in the first place? He didn't even like Batman, but Lori said she thought it would look cool on his F-350 when she spotted it at the swap meet. “Oooo, sweetie, that would look sooo bitchin’ on your truck!” Lori purred. What the hell, he thought. If it got him laid, it would be worth the $4.00.

Buckley started going through his kitchen drawers and came out with a rusty potato peeler. No, that wouldn't do the job. He dug around a little more and found a dull chef’s knife. That would have to do. He was looking for his leather jacket—the one with the Flogging Molly logo on the back—when he heard a loud pounding on his door. Shit, he thought, I’m totally fucked. Buckley crept silently up to the peephole and took a look. He was surprised to see the Prius Pussy standing on the other side of the door. He pounded again.

“Hey, open up! I want to talk to you! I know you’re in there, shithead!” Leslie shouted at the top of his lungs. “Open up, or so help me God, I’ll kick your fucking door down!”

Buckley couldn't believe his ears. He didn't think Prius Pussy had it in him. Did he really just call him shithead? Normally, Buckley would have been more than up for the challenge and cheerfully kicked this old guy’s ass down the stairs, but his current situation made it necessary for him to proceed with a bit more thought and caution. The last thing he wanted was to bring attention to himself—especially from John Patrick Law—and he needed to get that sticker off his truck.

“Uh, excuse me, mister,” Buckley shouted through the door. “Sorry—my bad. I’ll come move my truck right now, okay?”

Leslie was stunned. The last thing he expected was a remorseful tone from the fellow who had been brazenly misappropriating his assigned parking space for the past six months. Is that it? Really? Just like that, Batman was going to move his truck, and all was going to be right with the universe? Instead of relief, a new surge of rage coursed through Leslie’s veins. Batman wasn't going to get off that easily—not by a long shot.

Leslie backed away and took up position around the corner and just out of view from the peephole of apartment 609. When the door opened, he saw a young man of about twenty, with a shaved head and wearing a leather motorcycle jacket over—what else—a white wife-beater.

Batman was over six feet tall and looked to weigh at least 250 pounds. The weight did not appear to be all fat, however. The outline of well-defined muscle tone was evident even through the jacket. He was also wearing black jeans and steel-toed combat boots.

A thug—just as Leslie predicted. Batman was exactly the kind of guy that he despised: a swaggering, rude, inarticulate Neanderthal who lived only to bully and torment his fellow man. Leslie smirked at the predictable wallet chain, and he also observed something in Batman’s right hand that didn't surprise him—a large knife. So, that’s the plan: act nice and then come sneaking out to cause mayhem. Typical.

“So, what the fuck are you thinking about doing with that knife?” Leslie hissed as he moved around the corner, directly between Batman and his doorway. “Thinking about slashing my tires or some other un-neighborly shit?”

Taken completely off guard, Buckley swung around with the knife at the ready. He was a seasoned street fighter and had used a knife to defend himself before. He would have lunged at Leslie, but something stopped him dead in his tracks—the gun.

Leslie had the 9 mm pointed directly at Buckley’s mid-section. “Drop the toad sticker, shithead,” he said, motioning downward. “And get your hands the fuck up.”

“Hey, listen, man, I wasn't going to do anything to you, I swear…”

“Drop IT!” Buckley did as he was told. “Hands UP!” Buckley complied, and Leslie booted the knife off the landing.

“Now, move your ass back in there!” Leslie motioned Buckley into his apartment. Once inside, he pointed toward the sofa. “Keep those hands up and sit down, if you can find a place to sit in this rat hole!” Leslie glanced around the filthy room. The sofa, floor, kitchen counters; every flat surface was covered with fast food wrappers and empty paper cups. “Lovely digs you have here, Batman. Is there anybody else here with you? Let me guess, you live here all alone.”

Buckley shook his head in the affirmative. “Yeah, man, there’s nobody else here. Come on, you have to believe me, I wasn't going to do anything with that knife. You just scared me, that’s all…”

“SHUT THE FUCK UP!” Leslie had walked over to the window and was peeking out the blinds. “Sure you’re alone? How about your buddy in the rain slicker?

“Who?” Buckley was taken aback. Did this guy know about the hit-and-run? How? Suddenly, his temples started throbbing and his vision began to blur. He felt like he was going to throw up.

“Your little pal in the yellow raincoat, douchebag. He’s inside your truck right now, rockin’ out or something. What about him?”

“Inside my truck?” Buckley started to stand up to get a look through the blinds.

“SIT DOWN!” Leslie shoved the barrel of the gun into Buckley’s face. “Yeah, there’s a guy sitting in the passenger seat of your truck. The door is open and the dome light is on. He’s rocking back and forth…”

“I don’t know who it is—probably someone ripping me off.”

“Ripping you off, huh? Maybe we should call the cops? What do you think?”

“No! There’s no need to call the cops, dude.”

“And why is that? Could it have something to do with the accident you had with a bike?”

Buckley’s mind raced. This guy did know about the hit-and-run. It didn't make sense. “Bike? I didn't hit a bike. It was a deer. Out on Forest Drive. It just jumped in front of me…”

“Oh, please!” Leslie laughed. “Do you know how many times I've heard that bullshit? And, what happened to the fuckin’ deer? It got up and stumbled into the woods, right? Dumbshit. It is obvious from the damage to your front end that you hit someone on a bicycle or a small scooter. Did you really think you could get away with something like this?”

Leslie glanced through the blinds and noticed that the man in the yellow slicker had left the cab of the truck. He was now standing beside the vehicle in the rain. “It looks like your friend is getting tired of waiting for you. I think we should go downstairs and let him know you won’t be joining him tonight.



Small Talk

As they approached the figure in the yellow slicker, Leslie realized it wasn't a stranger. It was one of the twins, the Mettler Twins. He’d gone to school with the brothers since kindergarten. For the past few years, he saw one or both of them every weekend at Benson’s where they worked as bag boys. They always said hello and asked about Leslie’s dad—who they certainly hadn't had any contact with since the old man retired to Sun City, Arizona 15 years ago.

“Hey! What the hell were you doing inside my truck?” shouted Buckley. The twin quickly ducked back inside the cab.

Leslie didn't understand what a Mettler Twin would be doing hanging around a dirtbag like this guy. They clearly didn't run in the same circles, unless Batman sang in the church choir on Sunday and helped the Amberton Women’s Club with their flea markets. The Mettlers were both hard-working, religious guys who kept to themselves.

Leslie knew their names, but couldn't tell the twins apart. As he and Buckley got closer, he shouted out, “Hey! Which one are you?”

“I’m Georgie, Leslie Davis. Do you still have that Rocky and Bullwinkle lunch box? I really liked that lunch box. Your mom made you bologna sandwiches, and she used Oscar Mayer bologna, not the cheap kind.”

Buckley was fidgety and looked like he was considering a run for it. Leslie kept the gun close to his body, but still pointed directly at Buckley’s gut. “Put your fucking hands on that fender, sport. I’ll drop you before you get five feet,” Leslie whispered.

Leslie wasn't surprised that Georgie knew his name. The brothers seemed to remember everyone they went to school with on sight. He leaned inside the cab to get a closer look at the twin. “Damn, you've got a good memory, Georgie. I forgot all about that lunch box. I wish I still had it; probably worth a fortune on eBay. Oscar Mayer—that’s the good stuff. What the hell are you doing out here?”

Something didn't seem right, and Georgie’s routine small talk—the same lunch box/bologna conversation they always had at Benson’s checkout—was giving Leslie the creeps. Buckley looked like he wanted to crawl out of his skin, but he kept his eyes down.

“Georgie? You okay in there?”

“I’m waiting for Buckley Dennison.” Batman snapped to attention and Leslie grabbed hold of his collar. The younger man was very strong, but Leslie had little trouble holding onto him. Ten years of judo lessons evened out Buckley’s size advantage.

“And why are you waiting for this lowlife, Georgie? Where’s your brother Ralphie? Is he working the late shift at Benson’s?”

“Buckley used to be a good boy. His mother works at the county hospital. She cried when Buckley had to go away for selling drugs. He came home last year and his dad bought him this truck so he could do construction jobs.”

Georgie rocked back and forth in the cab of the truck. The rain started coming down even harder. Leslie felt the drops hit his face, even under cover of the carport. Georgie stared straight ahead. He seemed mesmerized by a hula girl figurine on the dashboard—it was also rocking back and forth.

“How do you know all that?” Buckley demanded. He pushed against Leslie’s grip and tried to move toward the frail, balding man in the truck. Leslie reminded him who was in charge with a sharp poke to his kidneys with the Glock 17. Buckley kept squirming.

“People talk. They tell us things and we remember them,” Georgie replied. “Buckley’s mother was Ralphie’s nurse when he had his operation. She remembered us from school. You probably remember Debbie Raines too, Leslie? You took her to junior prom. She sure was pretty. Remember? She wore a powder blue dress that matched your tie and cummer-bund.”

Leslie was stunned. Yes, he’d taken Debbie Raines to junior prom. That was 30 years ago. How could Georgie remember something so seemingly trivial?

“Debbie married Danny Dennison at St. Anthony’s right after they graduated from Amberton High,” Georgie continued, his voice sounded tinny—almost robotic. “Danny owns Dennison Fence Company now. His dad, Big Dan, died five years ago. Danny and Debbie got a divorce last summer. They don’t come to church anymore. Danny is an alcoholic. He’s in AA. Been sober for three years—except for that time at the Elk Lodge last February…”

“Shut up!” Buckley shouted. “You’re a goddamned FREAK! Stop talking about my family like you know us!”

“Buckley’s girlfriend Lori got pregnant,” Georgie continued. His rocking intensified. “She moved out three weeks ago because Buckley got drunk and hit her in the eye. Last week, Buckley bought a gun from Johnny Navarro. He paid Johnny $300…”

“SHUT UP!” Buckley screamed. “How in the fuck do you know that? There’s no way that you can know that!”

“People talk,” Georgie replied. “We listen. You’re not the baby’s father. That Cuban kid, Rick Diaz—he and Lori got together when you were in jail…”

“You’re a damn liar!”

A bolt of lightning lit up the sky. Buckley shoved past Leslie and lunged for Georgie’s throat. Leslie brought the butt of the pistol down on the back of Buckley’s skull two times and he crumbled onto the wet pavement. Georgie calmly turned toward Leslie and locked eyes with him, just as another crack of lightning broke through the clouds. In the brief flash of light, Leslie saw that Georgie’s shirt was completely covered with blood, and his Benson’s name tag appeared to have a chunk of something that looked like flesh dangling from it.

“We need to take him upstairs, Leslie Davis.”


Brain Food

Reality is merely an illusion, albeit a very persistent one.
 ~ Albert Einstein

Georgie was only about five foot four and probably weighed less that a buck fifty by Leslie’s estimation. He certainly never worked out at any of the local gyms. Nevertheless, he was remarkably strong. Georgie had no problem lifting Buckley’s legs and helping Leslie carry the much larger man up a flight of stairs. When they reached the landing, the neighbor across the hallway opened her door and peered outside. “Is everything okay out there?” she asked. The middle-aged black woman had a can of Miller Lite in her hand and was wearing a flannel bathrobe.

“Sorry, lady, he’s just drunk again,” Georgie replied without missing a beat. The men carefully laid Buckley down on the landing.

“This shit’s gettin’ real old,” said the neighbor lady, rolling her eyes. “I had to call the cops on him twice last week. Beat up his girlfriend. He peed on my front door. Peed on it. Are you his father, mister? You should really get that fucking kid into rehab, if you don’t mind my saying so.”

“Oh, believe me, ma’am, that’s the next thing on my to-do list,” said Leslie with a dismissive wave, while Georgie fumbled with the door to apartment 609. “Thanks for your concern.”

Once they had Buckley stretched out on the filth-strewn sofa, Georgie perched himself on a bar-stool and started rocking again. “Buckley is a very bad boy, Leslie Davis. He drinks and drives. He sells drugs. He kills people.”

Leslie couldn't believe the mess on Georgie’s shirt. It looked like half a brain's worth of gray matter was smeared across it. That’s when it donned on him: the damage to the grill of the Batmobile, the gore on Georgie’s shirt. “Did that bastard run over Ralphie?”

Georgie shook his head and started to sob. Leslie realized that he had never really looked at either of the Mettler Twins very closely before. Even when they had a conversation at the market, he tried to avoid eye contact with them. He had always considered them to be gentle, passive and completely harmless. Now, looking at Georgie’s contorted face, he had a different impression, an unsettling feeling deep in his gut—like an alarm sounding.

Leslie had never noticed the condition of Georgie’s teeth. Most of them were broken and crooked, and they all appeared to be sharp and pointed—almost as if they had been intentionally filed. Georgie held his hands up to his face. The skin stretched across his knuckles was as white as any Leslie had ever seen—almost translucent—and blue veins appeared to be throbbing just under the surface. The twin’s hair was thin and greasy, with strands hanging into his green eyes like unhealthy gray tendrils.

With the rain slicker off, Leslie was surprised to see tattoos covering both of Georgie’s forearms. The designs were tribal and very intricate. One depicted an inverted cross with a headless corpse hanging upside down from it. He would have never expected to see such ghastly ink on someone who was supposed to be so devoutly religious.

Leslie looked at the unconscious thug on the sofa and felt nothing but disgust. “Don’t worry about this piece of garbage, Georgie. Buckley is going to spend a very long time behind bars for what he did to Ralphie.” Leslie flipped open his cell and started to dial 911.

Leslie felt something hit him hard from behind. Then, everything went black.

When he came to, Leslie found himself quite securely bound, hands and feet, with duct tape. The empty fast food bags and wrappers surrounding his head and the stench filling his nostrils told him that he was on the floor of Batman’s apartment.

“I’m sorry I hit you, Leslie Davis, but I couldn't let you call the police. Buckley Dennison has to be punished our way—mine and Ralphie’s. He’s a bad, bad, BAD boy.”

Leslie twisted onto his side to look in the direction of Georgie’s voice. He opened his mouth to speak, hoping to implore the simpleton to untie him and listen to reason—but what he saw filled him with complete horror and disbelief.

Georgie was standing over Buckley’s body with a large spoon and a mixing bowl. The top of the man’s head was missing and the sofa was soaked with blood. Georgie was scooping large portions of Buckley’s brain into the bowl. A meat cleaver was lying on the ground a few feet away. It was covered with blood and pieces of scalp and bone. Leslie felt faint. He choked back vomit. This couldn't possibly be happening, he thought.

“Georgie! What did you do?” The little man had to be crazy with grief. That was it. The shock of seeing his brother killed was too much for his fragile mind, and now he was completely unhinged. It was a psychotic break of some kind, Leslie thought. “For God’s sake, Georgie, stop what you’re doing and let me loose!”

“All in good time, Leslie Davis.” Georgie shuffled into the kitchen with the bowl. Leslie heard what sounded like the loud whirling of a blender, but he couldn't see anything around the corner, except piles of trash on the floor. The blender noise stopped and Georgie soon emerged from the kitchen area, gulping thick, gory goo from the glass container. “First, I have to take care of Buckley Dennison.”

“What the fuck are you doing, you crazy bastard?” Leslie was on the verge of complete hysteria. “Help! HELP! Somebody call the cops! HELP!”

“Oh, calm down, Leslie Davis. You've always been so melodramatic, just like that time you got your teeth chipped on the teeter-totter in third grade. You’re such a big cry baby. Wah! Nobody is going to call the cops. Buckley’s neighbors are used to loud shenanigans, it seems, but if you don’t shut up, I’ll have to hit you again.” Georgie wiped the gore off his chin with his shirt sleeve. “Ralphie was the first to drink brains. He started with puppies and kittens. He said it helped him remember things. I didn't want to do it at first, but when I saw how smart it made my brother, I didn't have any choice. I couldn't let Ralphie get smarter than me!”

“Drink…brains?” Leslie struggled to free his hands, but they were wrapped in at least a half roll of duct tape. “That’s fucking crazy shit! Who could even imagine doing something like that?”

“Yes, I don’t know what made Ralphie think of it, really, but he said The Yellow King told him to do it. He prayed and prayed for a way to make us as smart as everybody else and our King finally talked to him one day after Sunday school. He made Ralphie special, so don’t make fun of him, Leslie Davis, or else you’ll make me…mad at you.” Georgie was almost finished with his gruesome beverage. He set the container on the floor, perched himself on the bar-stool, and started rocking in earnest again.

“Of course, our Lord isn't the same one we used to worship in Sunday School. That God left us for dead when we were babies. He threw us away like trash. The Yellow King takes care of us. He loves twins…and thunder and lightning. That’s why I was able to find Buckley so quickly. He could never escape me in the rain, the fool.”

“The sacrifices are necessary, of course. We found that it works better with humans than animals. I felt bad when we killed those two little girls in Carmen Springs and sweet old Mrs. Myers next door, even though Ralphie said it was okay, if it pleased The Yellow King. It made me sad, but it helped make us really, really smart. After that, Ralphie and me agreed to only take the brains of bad people. Remember Larry David Allen? He killed his sister, and me and Ralphie killed him.”

“Larry Allen didn't kill his sister, Georgie. She died in a plane crash in Texas.” Leslie was in shock, but he believed that if he kept Georgie talking, it might buy him some time. “Half the town went to her funeral, for Christ’s sake.”

“That’s what you think, Leslie Davis. That’s what everybody thinks, but Larry’s sister is buried under the concrete slab in his basement!” Georgie stood up and unbuttoned his blood-soaked work shirt. His pale white chest was decorated with the image of a bloody, double-sided axe and a Kraken-like creature surrounded by bolts of lightening. “The Yellow King told Ralphie all about it. He told Ralphie lots of things. There's more than one universe, Leslie Davis, did you know that? And sometimes things happen in other universes that are just like here, and sometimes those things are just a little...different. Sometimes, they're A LOT different.” Leslie felt the duct tape start to tear a little on his left wrist. He worked his hands slowly, back and forth, hoping Georgie wouldn't notice the movement.

The pint-sized maniac was getting agitated, and Leslie decided not to mention the fact that Larry Allen’s house didn't even have a basement. Of course, Larry did disappear under mysterious circumstances. Leslie always thought he ran off to escape his financial problems. Now, it was apparent that he simply had his brains turned into a protein shake by a couple of crazy, bloodthirsty freaks.

“Lots of people do very bad things and no one ever knows, except me and Ralphie. We know everything. Remember Father Dutton? He stole money from the collection basket at the church. He kept it in a shoe box and used it for drugs and boy prostitutes.”

Leslie seemed to remember something about the priest who disappeared after police found him cruising Sunset with a teenage runaway and a pocket full of crack. “I thought Father Dutton was shipped off to Costa Rica by the Pope or something.” He wanted to keep Georgie talking and distracted while he worked on the tape.

“No, we drank Father Dutton’s brains and blood. Ralphie made a stew out of his guts, too. That tasted awful. I do like ass meat, though. I think I’m going to cook Buckley Dennison’s ass for dinner tonight.” Georgie disappeared back into the kitchen and started rummaging around in the cabinets. “I wonder where he keeps his skillets…”

Leslie finally worked his hands free from the duct tape and was surprised to find the 9 mm was still stuck in his waistband. Georgie went to all the trouble to tie him up and didn't even bother to take the gun.

"Have you ever heard of Carcosa, Leslie Davis?" Georgie continued from the kitchen, over the sound of banging pots and pans. "I've never been there, but The Yellow King took Ralphie there once. There are two moons in the sky in Carcosa...or is it two suns? I don't remember, but it doesn't matter. I'm going to go there someday soon, and no one will ever find me."

When Georgie walked back into the living room, he was holding a large iron frying pan and a steak knife; clearly intending to harvest Buckley’s rear-end for supper.

“You lose, you cannibal FUCK!” Leslie took aim and fired.

Incredibly, the bullet struck the skillet and ricocheted into the wall. Leslie got off two more shots but they also failed to hit their mark. Leslie couldn't believe how fast Georgie was able to move. He screeched like a demon as he went right over the top of Leslie and out the apartment door.

The neighbor lady waddled out onto the landing and was presented with a clear view of the bloody carnage in apartment 609 through the open doorway. “Call 9-1-1!” Leslie yelled in her general direction. She screamed at the top of her lungs, dropped her beer, and retreated behind her own door.

Leslie was able to pull himself to his feet and hopped toward the door. He got to the landing just in time to see Georgie pedal around the corner on his bicycle and disappear into the rain. He didn't have an opportunity to get off another shot. It didn't matter, he thought. The cops wouldn't have any problem picking him up. Just look for the blood-covered lunatic on a white Schwinn beach cruiser.


Side Order

Men fear death as children fear to go in the dark; and as that natural fear in children is increased by tales, so is the other.
 ~ Francis Bacon

“They went to the Mettler Twins’ studio apartment and found all of the evidence—body parts in the freezer, an altar made out of bones—the typical Dahmer shit. The worst part was the “cauldron” they constructed. That’s the thing that’s supposed to give practitioners of black magic their powers. It’s like a big stew pot, except it’s covered with human skin. The Mettlers kept it full of fresh body parts and magical charms—I don’t even want to know what was in there exactly. Lord only knows how those bat shit-loony twins got mixed up in ancient pagan religion shit. Crazy bastards.

They found tunnels dug into the hills behind the apartment, too. I heard they went on for miles and no one has even explored the full depth of them yet—hell, who would want to? Not me. There has to be some bad ju-ju in those tunnels. Bad, bad ju-ju.”

“Damn, Leslie, that’s a helluva story,” said the grizzled bartender, as he swabbed the counter with his rancid bar towel. “I never get tired of hearing it.”

“Yeah, well, Doubleday advanced me 150,000 bucks for that story, Ray.”

“Good for you, buddy, but I heard they never caught that nut-job, Georgie Mettler. Doesn't that scare you a bit?” Ray held the bar towel up to his nose, gave it a whiff, and decided it was still good for a few more runs across the bar.

“No, I never did anything bad to Georgie. I don’t think he’s holding a grudge.” Leslie pushed his glass forward and motioned for another shot of bourbon. “If anything, I kind of helped him get his revenge.”

“I guess that makes sense,” shrugged the bartender. “I’d have a hard time sleeping, though—I’m just sayin’.” It was 11:30 PM on a Thursday night, and the only other customer in the place was a rummy at the other end of the bar, carefully nursing a beer.

“Who said I ever sleep, Ray? I can’t close my eyes for more than 15 minutes at a time. Those twins killed at least 20 people. The cops knew they had a serial killer on the loose, but they never suspected the Mettlers. Who the hell would have? They were flying so low under the radar; they probably would have never gotten caught.”

“Jesus, that’s a bitch, Leslie. I guess that’s why you moved up here to Portland, huh?”

“Yeah, Oregon is about as far away from Amberton as I was willing to go, but it doesn't matter much. There have been sightings of Mettler everywhere from Manitoba to Mexico—all false leads, of course. My theory is he killed himself far back in those tunnels behind his apartment. No one will ever find the body.” Leslie socked down the bourbon and slammed the inverted shot glass down on the bar. “Take it easy, Ray. See you tomorrow.” The bartender grunted and waved without looking up from the bar-ware he was polishing.

Leslie threw down two twenties and walked outside. Duchamp’s was in a seedy part of Old Town Portland, and his car was parked in a lot about a block away. It looked like rain, but it always looks like rain in Portland. He really hoped it wasn't going to hail—it was certainly cold enough, though. The throngs of homeless people who inhabit the area were already hunkered down in doorways and whatever other makeshift places of shelter they could find. The streets were virtually deserted.

As he approached his car, something caught his attention near the shuttered food carts across the street. It was a bicycle. A white Schwinn beach cruiser. It appeared to be chained to a street sign. “Nah, it couldn't be…” he muttered. Portland was filled with impromptu street art and there were white-washed bikes chained to posts all over town. Somebody told Leslie they were tributes to cyclists who were hit and killed by motorists. That was probably all there was to it, but something about this area was setting off his creep alarm big time.

During one of his many late night binges, Leslie listened to Ray tell the tale of two tragic deaths that happened at a hot dog stand in this particular food cart pod. First, the manager was found stabbed to death. The cops thought it was a botched robbery, but the man’s body was excessively mutilated and some of his organs were allegedly missing.

A month later, one of the cooks, some ex-con named Reilly something-or-other, was found dead underneath the Burnside Bridge. He was apparently in the process of drinking himself to death with a bottle of over-proof rum; fell and cracked his skull open. Bits of his brains everywhere. Rumors started to circulate that the hot dog cart was haunted and people stopped eating there. Ray postulated it was some kind of Manson-style plot formulated by a group of rogue Vegan/Anarchists. In any case, the cart closed soon thereafter.

Leslie cautiously crossed the street. The bike looked like Georgie’s, but there was a flowery basket attached to the front of it. Not a likely accessory for a serial killer’s ride, but then again, with Georgie Mettler, anything was possible. A shiver went down Leslie’s spine and then the hair stood up on the nape of his neck. Something was wrong here.

He considered going back to the car to get his gun. The money he got from the book publisher enabled him to start a new career as a private detective—something he always wanted to do. He had a license to carry a concealed weapon, but he usually just left his gun and holster locked up in the trunk of his car.

Tip Top Hot Dogs proclaimed the decaying sign on the converted Scotty trailer. The entire structure was no longer a viable, tow-able trailer, with a permanent lunch counter completely surrounding the thing. Leslie saw what appeared to be a basket of French fries sitting on the counter. “What the fuck?”

He also spotted what appeared to be new, unopened bottle of Heinz Ketchup next to the basket. A memory instantly flashed across Leslie’s mind. The Mettler Twins always shared a basket of fries at Lotta-Burger every evening. It was part of their regular routine when they worked at Benson’s. He used to see them there all the time…

Run!

Leslie sprinted for his car. The .44 was locked up. He was certain he was going to need it. Just as he reached the Prius, lightning cracked across the sky and rain poured down in a torrent. Something was propped up on the windshield. It looked like a small box…with a handle on top.


Aftermath

“So, it looks like suicide, huh?”

“Oh, yeah. Stuck the barrel of the gun in his mouth and pulled the trigger. You said he spent most of the evening in the bar down the street?”

“Yup. Bartender said he’s in there every night drinking up some money he got for a book deal. Says the guy seemed pretty depressed most of the time. Divorced.”

“No shit? Depression, booze and a gun. Never a good combo.”

“Damn, that’s quite a mess he made, there, Jules,” said the young police detective. “What is that, a .44?”

“Yeah, magnum. Took the whole goddamned top of his head off, and blew a hole in the sunroof, too. I guess he wanted to make sure he got the job done.” The crime scene investigator was scribbling notes on a clipboard, the sleeves on her lab coat were rolled up just enough to reveal a small portion of the intricate tattoos on her forearms.

“Jesus, brains splattered everywhere. How can you stand it?”

“Oh, you get used to it after a while. When I was in med school at Stanford, dissecting brains was my favorite thing, actually.”

“Jules, you are a real sicko.”

“Tell me about it, Detective Tyler. Tell me about it.”

“What’s inside the Rocky and Bullwinkle lunch box on his lap?”

“A baloney sandwich, that’s all. One baloney sandwich.”