Bizarre stories from the alternative reality. |
© Copyright 2000 by Dennis Latham
From the story collection Sudden Victims 2008
Originally published in Gothic.net
After the court hearing, Gina seemed on edge during the ride to dinner. She had changed during our six-month separation. The gray streaks had been dyed black, and she wore bright red lipstick. A green dress, cinched tight at the waist by a thin green belt, accented her weight loss and made her eyes bright emeralds.
"You look a lot younger."
She stared out the passenger window.
"So do you, Michael."
"Younger?"
"Full of yourself." She glanced
at me before turning away.
"Thanks. I guess your new lover bends
to your every need."
I realized then how much she had wanted
out. The hurt punched my chest. It would be easy to hate her, but I keep such
emotion locked up, especially now.
"Can we just drop it?" she said.
"Just making conversation."
"I thought we were still going to be
friends."
"We are."
"Then drop it." She looked
straight at me for the first time, brow pointed down. She had power since I was
the one still in love.
"Okay."
I had picked the restaurant for our final dinner as a
couple. A place called Richard's in rural Dover, Indiana, a town with a church,
a funeral home, several large Victorian houses, and one main road. We didn't
know anyone there.
That's why I was surprised to see our insurance man, Terry
Jenkins, in the restaurant parking lot pushing a guitar amplifier.
"Hey, Terry, what's up?" I said. "You play
music here?"
Short and chunky, Terry had curly brown
hair and Coke bottle glasses that magnified his blue eyes and made his narrow
chin appear pointed. He wore tight jeans and tan cowboy boots.
"How you doing, Mike?" He shook
my hand and nodded at Gina. "I play country ballads and some original
music."
"I don't remember you telling me you
were a musician."
Terry shrugged. "I keep it separate
from the business. What you all doing up this way?"
"Our divorce was final today and we
decided to eat dinner in some place we've never been before."
Gina checked her lipstick and clicked a
small compact closed. "Sort of a celebration," she said.
"On your part maybe," I said.
Gina's eyes darted sideways and her red
lips curled like she bit a lemon.
Terry shrugged and seemed uncomfortable.
"We're still friends," I said.
"That's great." He wiped a dirt
smudge off the amp. "Uh, how are things at your house?"
"Fine. I kept the house, and it's
still standing." I smiled at Gina. "I even rearranged the
furniture."
Gina rolled her eyes. She had told friends
how the house would collapse without her. I had picked Richard's because I
figured we wouldn't know anyone and have to answer questions. The world is too
small, I guess.
Terry ignored or didn't catch my slam at
Gina. He pushed up his glasses. "I meant do things in the house still move
around?"
"Not so much anymore."
"Maybe your ghost left."
Gina got fidgety. "I'm going to the bathroom,"
she said, walking away.
At my dining room table one night just
before dinner, Terry waited while I signed insurance papers. All the silverware
suddenly turned to point at me.
"How did you do that?" he said.
"Do what?"
He didn't mention it again, but he left quickly and I
hadn't seen him since.
That was about a month before Gina admitted having an
affair, and the Christmas tree branches bent down and jerked so bad ten
ornaments flew off and broke. And while this happened we heard a sparking wire
noise and the television turned off and on twice.
She turned pale. "Jesus, you did that."
I had looked at the tree, but I was on the
couch several feet away. "That's crazy. I did not."
"You scare me," she said.
One excuse is as good as another when a
relationship ends. She moved to her sister's during the night, leaving me
alone. At the time, this was not a good thing.
"Everything is fine now," I told Terry.
"That's good. You seem
different."
"How?"
"I don't know. Maybe you're more
relaxed."
"You could be right."
Since I now slept better, I noticed my dull
blue eyes had turned sky colored and had lost the red lightning strikes across
the whites. My brown hair was even losing the gray streaks, except around the
temples. But I had also lost all fear, of anything, except for Gina's hold on
my heart. For once, I felt good about myself because I wasn't constantly being
told what was wrong with me.
Terry grabbed his amp. "I need to get
my show on the road. Stick around after you eat."
"We will. How's the food here?"
"Great."
I had noticed several motorcycles in the
parking lot. "And the people?"
"Good old boys, but friendly."
"Redneck?"
"Just farm people mostly."
"I'm glad I wore jeans then."
Terry smiled. "There's never any
trouble here. You'll fit in."
"Right."
It was a cool June Friday night so the side
door was propped open. About ten feet along a blistered dark wood panel hall,
across from the men's room, another open door on the left led to the restaurant.
Our table faced the hall and the bathroom door. We saw
everyone coming and going. A hefty blonde took our order and told us we had
arrived just in time because a wedding party would arrive soon and things would
get hectic. Terry worked at setting up his equipment about five feet to our
front right in a corner.
Behind us, noisy drunks, maybe fifteen people, most in
faded jeans and dirty t-shirts laughed, cussed, and talked loud from tables and
the bar. Video games dinged, playing music. The smoky room had a roving
unwashed armpit stench. Everybody knew each other. A drunk in a Mack Truck hat
sat at the table to our left, beer bottles surrounding him. I saw his narrow
brown eyes move up and down Gina's body.
Gina looked as if she wanted to run away as we waited for
our food. She kept glancing at her watch. I tried to bring up the affair. I
still couldn't imagine her with another man.
"Do you have a date tonight?"
"I'm beginning to think this was a bad
idea," she said.
"I have a right to know after five
years of marriage."
"Maybe I should try to call a
cab."
"Come on, we're out in God's country.
Just forget I said anything."
The waitress brought our fish logs. Terry
tuned his guitar. A cigarette dangled from the right side of his mouth, and he
laughed at a joke someone told at the bar.
I
heard several quick thumps against the wall out in the hall. A bald guy with a
bright red beard and wild brown eyes staggered into the restaurant.
He was naked from the waist up, with fat bulging over the
belt loops on his muddy jeans. He had a tattoo of Jesus, complete with a halo,
on his right breast. I smelled whiskey.
"Cindy," he yelled. "Where are you,
bitch?"
Terry turned. "Can I help you?"
The man snarled, exposing tobacco stained teeth splayed
like tilted cemetery stones. He pulled a silver twenty-two-caliber revolver
from his back pocket and shot Terry in the head.
It was one of those things, like a combat
ambush, that happens quickly, without obvious warning. An incident that changes
your life forever from that point forward.
A woman screamed. The bar went morgue quiet
except for a video game running electronic music scales. Gina stiffened and her
right foot bumped my leg.
I had witnessed headshots in Vietnam, but I didn't expect
to see one here. The bullet struck Terry above the left eye. Had it been a
bigger caliber, we might have had brains on our fish logs. A twenty-two can't
blast through a skull, so it bounces around inside and scrambles the brain.
Terry was dead when he fell on top of his guitar. Pooling
blood formed a puddle three feet wide. Acrid smoke drifted from the gun barrel.
My tongue tasted coppery like the scent of fresh blood. The shooter stared.
Spit ran down his chin.
"Earl, what the hell did you do?"
It was the drunk in the Mack Truck hat.
Earl spun and fired twice. The first shot
hit the man in the chin, the second between the eyes. He toppled backwards,
scattering beer bottles.
Chairs rumbled. I heard people jump over
the bar, breaking glass. Our table was a few feet from the shooter, his next
obvious target, so I froze. I do have a gun permit for personal protection, and
I normally carry a Beretta twenty-five caliber. I left it home because I was
going to court. I guess I should have kept it in the car and put it in my
pocket, but Gina hated guns.
The shooter fired over us, hitting glass.
"Get away from that damn phone,
Debbie."
I heard the phone hit the floor.
"Where's Cindy?"
"She's not here," a voice said,
from behind the bar.
"You're a liar, Richard. Where's Les
Campbell?"
"They're not here, Earl."
Gina whimpered, and I gripped her right
wrist under the table.
"Don't move," I whispered.
Earl looked at me. "What did you say,
boy?"
"Your wife or girlfriend is cheating
on you. I can relate to that, but what you're doing isn't the answer."
Earl's brown eyes opened wide, staring into
space, but I could read nothing in them. Saliva leaked from the right corner of
his mouth.
Gina trembled. Her pulse raced against my
fingers.
"The police are coming, Earl,"
Richard said.
Someone, probably half the people back there, had cell
phones.
"Let my wife walk out the door, Earl."
"I'm not your wife," Gina said.
I released her wrist and my heart dropped.
I had offered myself to save her, and she let this redneck psycho know she
hated me.
On the floor, Terry's corpse gurgled, shutting down. For a
moment, Earl's eyes displayed sudden panic. He glanced at the bar and back at
me. A familiar pricking needle sensation started at my feet and moved up my
torso. It's the same feeling a person gets when a leg or arm falls asleep and
circulation returns.
I slipped into a mental state I had used to survive
Vietnam: a loss of morality and remorse, making an enemy become an inhuman
object.
Earl pulled back the silver hammer, pointed the gun at my
face, and pulled the trigger.
It stuck.
He shook the pistol, confused, and I could have stood and
knocked him down. But I had willed the gun to jam, and was amazed, as always,
that such things worked. I was full of myself, Gina would say.
Earl grabbed the pistol barrel; raised the butt to strike
me. I imagined two big hands wrapped around his chest.
Squeeze, I thought.
Earl suddenly jerked and flailed at his chest. The gun
slipped from his hand, banging the floor. The fat at his sides rippled and
compressed, making his waist appear thinner. His face went scarlet.
Then, he stiffened and released an airy, high pitch
squawk, his face going blue. He gagged. I heard a sickening crunch when bones
snapped. Earl's brown eyes bulged and ruptured. He spat bloody gristle down his
flattened upper torso. When he toppled, I saw busted ribs sticking from his
back like slick white spikes.
I turned toward the love of my life. Gina's face went ash
gray and her upper lip trembled.
"Did you-u do that?" she said.
"I forgot to tell you I rearranged the furniture
without touching it."
"Oh, my God."
One word slid through my mind. I couldn't stop it.
Squeeze.
Gina jerked as if grabbed by a predator.
She reached out to me, wide-eyed, before her breath hissed out and a spasm put
her under the table.
"No." I jumped up and moved
backwards, bumping Terry's corpse. I stepped over him and slid in blood before
I caught myself. The table shook, scraping the floor. A loud wailing started
from terrified patrons behind the bar. Gina babbled and gasped and the sharp
crack of her bones made her scream. I was in a trance, vaguely conscious of
figures moving past me. Gina's blood sprayed a red fountain across Earl's
twisted torso. The table stopped moving.
A tingle rolled up and down my body,
addictive, like an endless orgasm. I could control the power during those
months alone after Gina left, when my ability to move objects expanded. I had
grandeur thoughts of good deeds. Gina would want me back. I know now I could
never control my rage. I had murdered the one person I loved.
I glanced toward the bar. The place was empty. They had
all fled out the door. I turned when I heard footsteps behind me. A man wearing
a tuxedo stood in the doorway.
"Jesus," he said, and then ran back outside.
The wedding party, I thought. Sirens approached, whooping.
The troops were coming. Soon, the sirens stopped. I heard doors open and slam.
Other sirens wailed in the distance.
I stepped into the blistered panel corridor and saw them
outside, framed in the propped open door ten feet in front of me: a blue
Indiana State Police car and a white County Sheriff jeep. The officers crouched
behind their vehicles, guns pointed toward the door. Behind them, bar patrons
and a wedding party waited in groups.
I closed my eyes. It didn't matter who was out there. I
had a visual, and that was enough. A wedding and a divorce: great irony. I
tucked in my shirt, took three deep breaths, and ran my fingers through my
hair.
Squeeze.
It would be an all around bad night for the mere mortals
in Dover, Indiana.
The
screams began seconds before I opened my eyes and ambled toward the exit.
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