He wakes up each morning hoping
something bad happens to him. He sprawls out in his small bed, stares at the
ceiling, and pictures a car hitting him. It propels him over the top and he
breaks his neck, snaps his spine, and cracks his skull when he lands on the
street. He looks out his apartment window and sees himself dying on the toilet.
It is a cold December morning like today when claws colder than a thousand
Decembers tear open his arteries. He clutches his chest and tumbles to the
floor. Robbie wakes up each morning hoping to die.
When Saul sees him the first time,
Robbie is climbing a restaurant sign at six o'clock in the morning. He shouts
at two men standing below. He says college students drinking at the bar next-door
toss change onto the top of the sign. He says there is enough money for a half
gallon of vodka or more. Both men laugh at him. Robbie is drunk, but his hands
are trembling, and sweat squeezes from his skin. He needs more.
Saul watches Robbie pull himself
onto the top of the sign and start filling his pockets with change. Saul says
nothing, but he cannot look away. The two men standing at the base of the sign
cannot look away. It is a vertical tight ropewalk across a fraying rope for an
audience of three. They are waiting for the cord to snap. He drops six feet to
the sidewalk below when his foot misses a letter on the sign. It sounds like a
box of books landing on a wooden floor when his back slams into the pavement.
His head smacks the stone and fire flashes through his skull. Pennies bursting
from his pockets roll across the concrete. Robbie has four dollars and three
cents. Not even enough for a pint of vodka.
When Saul sees Robbie the second
time, he is puking at a downtown street corner. Saul is eating his lunch in a
city park on a hot August afternoon. Robbie follows a trio of loud, sneering
drunks into the park. They hear his vomiting, turn around, and explode with
laughter. Robbie wipes his mouth on his arm and straightens his back. They
laugh louder. Fuckin' pussy! What's
wrong, can't handle it? Robbie curses and stumbles towards them.
The trio mixes with teenager sitting
and standing around the chess tables. Robbie sits next to a muscular black
teenager named Louis. Louis wears a sleeveless white t-shirt and khaki pants
reaching to his shins. Saul is taking a bite from his sandwich when it starts.
A short, swollen drunk screams at Louis. Get
outta this park, you fuckin' nigger! Louis springs to his feet. He towers
over the drunk.
If
you don't shut your mouth, alky, I'm not going to fuck you up. You're a fuckin'
midget bitch. If you say that shit again, I'll fuck him up! Go on, try me. Robbie
is in a half-conscious daze and totters back and forth at a chess table. The
drunk steps towards Louis. You ain't
gonna do shit! Fuck you, nigger! Louis whips around and punches Robbie in
the side of the head Saul loses sight of him when he topples backwards. The
drunks run out of the park. Louis straddles Robbie, pinning him to the ground,
and hits him six times in the face. Saul calls the police and tells the
dispatcher to send help. A female voice screams at Louis. Stop hurting him! Louis freezes when he hears the faint shriek of a
police siren. He scrambles to his feet and sprints out of the park. Saul rushes
to Robbie and kneels at his side. When Robbie sees him, he tries to speak, but
blood bubbles from his mouth. It is the second time in a week that Saul watches
paramedics load him into an ambulance.
A week passes before Saul sees him
again. Saul is director of a low-income community center that hands out free
groceries. When Robbie applies for food, Saul handles his intake interview. It
is seven days since the attack, but Robbie is still in a daze.
"How long have you been in
town?"
Robbie shrugs and closes his eyes.
"This time? I don't know, maybe a couple of months."
His right leg
bounces fast, but his voice is soft and slow.
"So you've lived here before.
Are you from here originally?"
"No, I was born in a town up
north."
"So why are you back this
time?"
Robbie raises his head and looks at
Saul. "I've come back here to die. I want to die." He inhales and
blows out a long sigh. "A black dog, some kind of demon, killed my best
friend here five years ago. It's been huntin' me ever since." He squeezes
his eyes shut and puckers his lips. "I want it to end here. I want to
die."
Saul stops writing, leans back in
his chair, and chews on his pen. He cocks his head to the right and stares at
Robbie. He stares at the bare white wall behind Saul. When he sighs, his eyes
flutter and he spits out a burst of air. He slurs, but Saul does not smell
alcohol. He shuffles and stumbles when he walks, but he says he is okay. He
says he is fine. The words slide from his mouth like steam hissing from a pipe
crack.
Believing a demonic dog kills your
friend, eats his corpse, and follows you the rest of your life can be
concussions talking, but Saul pushes that thought out of his mind. Falling six
feet and slamming your skull into concrete bruises your brain, eating six stiff
right jabs to the face smashes noses, blackens eyes, and bloodies lips, but it
never stuns you enough to see demons snapping at your heels. An acid stew of
nerves and rage is bubbling in Robbie's stomach and filling his mind. Wave
after wave splashes into him harder than any landing or punch and knocks him
down. Black dogs crawl out of the rubble.
He talks to people like Robbie every
day. A twenty-year-old burn victim walks into the community center that
morning. He needs a place to sleep. Fire turns his apartment into ashes and
melts the left side of his neck. The skin is the color of dry chewing gum. Skin
grafts scar his neck with jagged lines, ridges, and deep pockets. His left arm
is a narrow shaft of pink putty dangling at his side and the twisting blue
veins bulging against his thin skin are dark strands of twine tying the arm to
his body. He says his stove burst into flames while frying a salisbury steak.
Saul nods, lowers his head, arches his eyebrows, and whispers he's lucky to be
alive.
However, Saul reads the newspaper.
He knows the truth. Two weeks ago, he
sees an article about a twenty-year old calling the police to complain about
the voices in his head. God and Satan are whispering, screaming, pointing out
his enemies, prodding his fear, and rattling his brain. They will not shut up.
The dispatcher stutters and starts speaking when the twenty year old breaks off
the call. He paces in his living room, screaming and clutching his head with
both hands. Police trace the call, but it is too late. He will not wait. He
will shut them up himself. He pours gasoline over his head and sets himself on
fire with a pocket lighter. When police see him for the first time, he is
flailing in his front yard, flames blooming across his body and hoarse, piercing
screams crackling within the fire. He hears no other voice.
"That's quite the story,
Robbie. Tell me more about it?"
When Robbie sees the black dog for
the first time, it is straddling his friend's limp, mangled corpse and chewing
deep into his neck. Flames swirling around its long, narrow skull lash the air
with short commas of fire. The dog's black, bulging shoulders jerk when it
bites into his friend's stomach and its gulping echoes like a mallet thumping a
bass drum. A thick, fecal smell stings Robbie's nose and causes his eyes to
water. He vomits and falls backwards into a concrete wall. He shudders and
slides to the floor.
"What was your friend's
name?"
"Mike Jensen." His voice
is a flat mumble.
"Where were you guys at?"
Tornado sirens wail, sheets of rain
splatter the city, and lightning slices across the charcoal sky. Robbie and
Mike are looking for somewhere dry when they climb through the window of an
abandoned house. The house is large, a sagging porch winds around its face, and
gray soot covers two bay windows flanking the front door. It looks like a dense
layer of cobwebs clouding two open eyes.
"The place was empty and looked
like it had been for a long time. Lots of busted up furniture, trash, old
clothes. The house stank bad. Smelled like rotten eggs."
He speaks in short bursts, the words
spitting from his mouth as each memory flashes into his mind. He stares at the
floor when he tells the story, sets his elbows on his legs, and presses his
palms together.
Robbie keeps talking. Two narrow
staircases on each side of the first floor lead to the second floor. When they
walk upstairs, a cold breeze hisses through the house and brushes against their
backs. Mike says it is a broken window letting the storm in. Robbie senses
something is wrong and trembles. They see dark splotches of soot marking the
white walls of a large room. The marks look like black stars. The wind blows
harder again his back. Mike feels it too, but neither man speaks.
"I don't remember much after
that. Just patches. Everything was fuzzy, like a dream, and I couldn't think
straight."
"Why didn't you just leave if
you were so afraid? You could have found somewhere else to go."
Robbie raises his hand. He is pale
and retches twice. Saul thinks Robbie will vomit and the muscles in his stomach
tighten.
"Are you alright?" Saul
reaches under his desk and pulls a wastebasket in front of Robbie. "You
need something?"
Robbie coughs and throws his head
back. "Yeah, I'm okay." He looks at Saul and clears his throat.
"We couldn't find our way out."
The house darkens and there is no
light except flashes of lightning blasting through the windows. Robbie feels
like a sheet of ice clings to his body. They walk into a room with a large
picture window set high on one wall. There is no wind here. There is heat, a
sour tasting cloud of moisture washing across his face and stinging his skin.
The lightning snarls and fills the room with white fire. Robbie staggers
backwards and sees the dog landing on Mike. He cannot move.
"If you couldn't move, how'd
you escape?"
"You ever feel trapped? Like
you can't get out or don't know how?" He raises his voices and glares at
Saul.
Saul wants to calm Robbie and
whispers. "Sure, I know what that feels like. Everyone does."
"My heart was beating so hard
that I was in pain. It felt like a heart attack. I looked like crazy for the
door, but I didn't see one. I ran across the room and jumped through the
window. It cut me up pretty bad, but I got out."
He remembers crashing through the
window and glass briars slicing his skin. He does not remember landing. He is
wedging his body between two fence posts when he wakes. The rain pelts his face
and jagged bursts of lightning streak across the sky. He turns his head to the
right and his cheek sinks into the mud. He sees the house. The picture window
is intact. When the bursts of lightning tear open the sky, flashes swallow the
glass and the white-hot glare blinds him. When the lightning stops, he does not
see or hear another living thing. The power is out and shadows are shrouding
the buildings.
He staggers through the yard and
finds the street. He runs, swinging his legs in full stride, and does not slow
for half a mile. His chest throbs with pain and his head is on fire. The houses
around him are dark and he is alone in the middle of the street.
"I was living on the streets
that summer. Me and Mike had a camp behind a city park. I went there 'cause I
couldn't think of anywhere else to go."
"Why do you think the dog let
you go?" Saul shrugs. "It's just hard to imagine." He smiles
hoping it dulls his disbelief.
Robbie straightens in his chair and
tilts his head towards the ceiling. "You mean hard to believe."
Saul pauses before answering.
"Yeah, I won't lie, Robbie. That too."
Without warning, Robbie jerks his
shirt up to his neck. His ribs bulge against his skin like bedsprings in a
broken down mattress. Saul leans back when he sees the scars. Two wide grooves
crisscross his chest. The scars are a few inches deep with thick scabbing at
the edges.
"The dog did that to you?"
"Do you believe me now?"
Saul believes a human hand carves
scars like this. The hand belongs to Robbie or someone else, but they are not
the claw marks of a demonic dog. "Something happened to you, Robbie. I'm
sorry for you. Whatever it was."
Robbie stares at him. "It was
waiting for me in my tent. It jumped on top of me and clawed my chest. I
thought I was goin' die, but it crawled off and walked away. The scars never
healed. Ever since then..." He stops speaking and sneers. "You'll believe
me soon. I want it to finish what it started that day. I want to die."
Before Robbie picks up two bags of
groceries and leaves, Saul asks him if he wants to meet for coffee at eight
o'clock tonight. Robbie narrows his eyes and cocks his head to the side. He
steps back.
"Why?"
"I want to hear about the rest
of it, Robbie. I know there's more you wanted to tell me." Saul lowers his
voice and takes a step towards Robbie.
He smirks. "But you don't
believe me, Mr. Ivers. So why?"
The fluorescent lighting covers
Robbie's face with a dull glow. Saul sees the scars marking his face. Parallel
grooves slant across his cheek and a wide wrinkle of skin reaches from under
his left ear to his chin. The scars are like war paint in the white wave of
light falling from the ceiling.
"I want to understand, Robbie.
That's all."
***
He
has one dream. It swells from the bottom of his brain once a week and he wakes
crying each time. He stands near the shore of a blue river. It snakes through a
narrow valley where tall cedars and slate rock formations cover the steep
hillsides. The thick spikes of grass are purple, stiff, and reach Saul's knees.
He cannot see the sun and clots of sapphire clouds blanket the sky. He watches
hundreds of upturned black umbrellas creeping across the surface of the silent
river.
They are drifting north into a
distant blue mist. The umbrella spines are rigid, silver stems of scentless
flowers. The umbrellas are breathing. Their black, vinyl canopies of skin are
rising and falling. They slide with the rippling current, spinning from side to
side, and their arching limbs brush against each other like hands caressing in
the dark.
The dream changes after meeting
Robbie for the first time. Upturned black umbrellas choke the blue river,
sapphire clouds hide the sun, and a mist glitters in the distance, but
something is coming for him this time. A hoarse roar blasts out of the mist and
hundreds of black umbrellas burst into flames. The black dog steps out of the
mist and glares at Saul. Its loud pig snorts and gurgling breaths cause him to
wince and cover his ears. It walks over the umbrellas, striding through the
air, a carpet of fire flaring below him, and holding his head high. It is
coming for him.
Saul cannot move. He cowers and his
hands rise to block the dog's red, diamond-shaped claws and teeth. Fear flashes
through his body, blinding his brain, searing his nerves, and scorching his
tongue. A knot of pain tightens around his stomach. He is choking, bending
over, and coughing up clumps of dry dirt. He cannot stop. He cannot wake up.
He stops coughing when a stinging
chill grips his body. A claw slams down on his shoulder and spins him around.
The dog is standing inches away. It is squatting on its thick horse legs and
extending its head towards Saul. His back is straight and his hands are flat
against his legs. The dog's narrow face dissolves into a blinking soup of
swirling black, white, and red pinholes. The blinking slows and greens, browns,
and blues spill into its face. The colors bleed into each other and a pair of
eyes breaks through the checkered static. They are his mother's eyes and her
face fills in around the familiar gaze.
Saul cries when he sees her sinking
cheeks, pale marble eyes, and violet skin. She is dead, but her soul plunges
like a drop of water, picking up speed and rushing past death, splashing and
pooling into a void, an absence beyond the reach of life and death alike. There
is a body buried in a graveyard. There are pictures and words on paper. She
lives through ink and rock in the waking world. However, he knows now that is
not her true face. For the first time, he sees her true face and knows that he,
like her, does not exist.
Saul closes his eyes tight. He wants
to wake up, but when he opens his eyes, the dog is staring at him. It is
smirking and its three eyes are crimson triangles of lava bubbling in the
sockets. Auburn plumes of flame erupt from a halo of fire surrounding its head.
The dog leans forward and stretches its head towards Saul. Its cold breath
smells like mildew and rotten meat. His muscles knot up and his skin is numb.
Fear cuts into his body and hollows him out. It has come for him.
The dog stops moving. It lowers it
heads and six long, glistening tongues slide out of its mouth. The tongues are
thick tentacles and blood smears stain their black skin. Pink bulbs as large as
a softball are at the end of each tentacle and the deep pucker in their
leathery skin is a smaller mouth that never stops opening and closing.
The tentacles are rising. They are
swaying, spinning in small circles, and rustling against each other. It sounds
like a strong wind buffeting a tent. They are weaving around each other,
clinching and merging, a swelling thread spiraling towards the sky. Saul wants
it to end, but he cannot wake up. He will never wake up. He knows he is going
to die.
When the thick black tentacle snaps
backwards and lashes Saul, darkness swallows him. He is screaming and the bed
sheets are damp with sweat when he wakes up. His stomach twists, bile bubbles
up his windpipe, and Saul spends the next hour vomiting into the toilet.
***
Saul is sick after eating a late
lunch and leaves work three hours early. Between the pain lacerating his
stomach and his thoughts about meeting Robbie later, getting anything done at
the center is impossible. Robbie tells him he will not meet in public places.
He picks up scrap metal and free food, buys plastic half-gallon bottles of
vodka, and talks to people when he has no other choice. He guzzles the vodka
alone in his room and stares at his television. No one needs him. If he drinks
coffee in a restaurant, the black dog will find him and kill everyone there. If
Saul wants him to keep talking, they have to be alone.
They are at Robbie's apartment the
next night. He rents a single room in a wilting A-frame house two blocks north
from the courthouse square. A short, fat old woman in a purple nylon gown waves
from the front porch. She is slumping deep into an iron-frame lawn chair with
thick yellow cushions. It looks like she is melting into the seat. Robbie says
she sucks down cigarettes and never gets his name right. When she sees a
television documentary about killer germs, she pays Robbie to staple visqueen
strips over the windows. Robbie says she thinks it will keep the air pure inside.
They are gray plastic sheets covering cold eyes.
There is a small bed, a silent
television, and a short wooden table in his room. Stains spot the bed's thin
white sheets and Saul sees an empty pint bottle of vodka on top of the
television. A fraying hardcover dictionary props up one table leg and a thick
layer of duct tape cuffs the leg inches above the floor. There is a small
window open above his bed and the smooth concrete walls and floor gleam under
the ceiling light.
"I don't have a chair."
Robbie flings a hand towards the bed. "Sit there. I'll sit on the
floor."
Robbie crosses his legs when he
sits. He pulls his legs tight against his thin body, plants his elbows on each
leg, and rocks back and forth. He stares at his lap.
Saul frowns. "I'm glad you want
to keep telling me your story, Robbie. I'm here to listen and help if I
can."
Robbie snorts and looks at Saul.
"It's okay that you think I'm crazy. I don't give a fuck. But don't treat
me like a moron..."
Saul raises his palm and his eyes widen.
"Hey, I'm sorry, I didn't mean..."
Robbie leans forward and shakes his
head. "Fuck what you meant." He leans back and sighs. "We both
know you think I'm nuts, but you'll listen. That's why I want to tell you.
Someone needs to know."
"Know what?"
"What happened to me." He
whispers and lowers his head.
He cannot leave his tent for two
days. Whenever he unzips the flap and starts pulling it back, the black dog
charges the tent. Robbie screams, closes the flap, and scrambles away from the
door. He curls into a ball and waits to die, but death never comes. No one
hears his throat-scarring screams for help. He guzzles a gallon of vodka in thirty-six
hours but does not sleep. He hears it pacing outside.
The pacing stops on the third day.
The sun is setting and the tent is a gray, humid dome in the dwindling light.
The stink of sweat, urine, feces, and rotting food burns his nostrils. He is
deep in the stomach of a beast, digestive smells swirling around him, and heat
soaking and spoiling his body.
The black dog is gone. The trees
near the tent are not moving and the world is silent. Robbie opens the door and
crawls out of the tent. There are no footprints or claw marks in the dirt. The
dog is not here, but a static charge hangs in the air and causes the hair on
his arms to rise.
"I don't understand, Robbie.
Why would it keep letting you go if it wants to kill you?"
"It's playing with me. Like a
cat with a fucking mouse." He shivers and looks under his bed. "Mind
moving for a second? I gotta get my backpack from under the bed."
"No problem."
Saul scoots to the foot of the bed
and Robbie pulls his backpack out. He unzips it, takes out a quart of vodka,
and breaks the bottle's seal. When he tilts the bottle up, his eyes are staring
at the ceiling and blinking like someone falling asleep. He chokes with each
gulp.
"Do you drink like that all of
the time?" Saul lowers his voice and cocks his head to the side.
Robbie's moist eyes bulge out of
their sockets. He licks his lips and sneers. "Fuck you, man. I drink when
I want to."
Saul's shoulders with a deep sigh
and his head drops when he exhales. He wants to listen, he wants to smash the
walls of alcohol and clouds of hallucination cutting Robbie off from the world,
but every word is a frantic, white-knuckled slur and his glancing blows leave
no mark. The humming frustration building inside of Saul sparks the urge to
grab Robbie's shoulders and shake him, pleading with him to stop drinking,
begging him to believe that there is no dog stalking him. You need help, Robbie! Please listen to me! I just want to help you.
Saul sighs and raises his head.
"How long ago did this start?"
"It'll be a year in four
days." He lunges forward coughing. His body thrashes and a knot of phlegm
shoots out of his mouth. It hits the floor and a small glob creeps down his
chin. Saul moves and none lands on him. Robbie rubs his hand across his chin
and wipes it off on his pants.
"Where's the bathroom? I'll get
something to clean that up."
Robbie shrugs and clears his throat.
"To the left, by the kitchen."
The bathroom is small. The yellowing
sink slumps on the wall, dark stains freckle the corners of a small circular
mirror, and the floor around the toilet is rotting and damp. Saul tears a short
strip of toilet paper from a half-used roll and, as he turns to leave, sees his
reflection. He stops, puts his hands on the sink, and leans forward. There is a
hairline crack in the glass extending from one corner to another. It segments
his face into disjointed halves and the grime on the glass blurs his image. Who do you think you are and what are you
doing here? I am sick, lost, and here to help this man. He wants to die and
someone has to care. Someone has to stop him.
Robbie cannot stop. When Saul comes
back to his room, Robbie cannot stop moving. He massages his hands and pops his
knuckles. He rubs his neck and taps his legs. Robbie cannot stop talking about
the dog. It keeps coming.
It finds his new camp the next
morning. The black dog tears open the tent and bites into Robbie's leg. He
screams for help, pushing his voice out of his body so hard it feels like
someone pinching his tonsils, and digs his fingers into the ground. There is no
escape. The dog drags Robbie out of the tent and releases his leg. He clutches
the gushing wound, his hands vanishing in a bloody tide, and pleads for his
life. The black dog stands over him and blocks out the morning sun. Its head
weaves towards him. Robbie crawls across the ground and, when he looks behind
him, sees its long mouth curling into a smile. It takes slow, long steps
towards him.
When Robbie staggers to his feet,
the dog lashes his back with its thick claws. They hook into his body and strip
off a layer of skin. Pain inflames every nerve and muscle. He drops to his
knees, rolls onto his side, and cannot stop screaming.
The pain is gone. He is not
screaming, he is not bleeding, and there is no scar on his leg. He is sitting
in the center of the clearing, crossing his legs, the morning sun warming his
face. He hears the dog walking behind him. Its crunching footsteps are coming
closer. Its breathing sounds like a drain spitting up a fountain of fluid and
coats the back of his head and neck with a mist.
Robbie lunges forward, but the dog
claws into his shoulder and jerks him to the ground. His back slams into the
dirt and the impact knocks the wind out of him. He opens his eyes and sees the
dog staring down at him. He opens his eyes and sees the dog staring down at
him. It is panting, snarling, and the flames surround its head unite in a bright
halo. When Robbie opens his mouth to scream, a tide of blood explodes from the
dog's mouth, pours over his face, and fills his mouth. It tastes like vinegar
and gasoline.
"Blood?" Saul's voice
cracks when he asks the question. He is wading in dark water and cannot measure
the depth.
"It hit my face forever and
made me choke. And I could hear the dog breathing the whole time." He
clinches his fists tight and they look like knots of bone. "I couldn't
move for a long time after it stopped."
"Where was the dog?"
"Gone." Robbie drinks more
vodka and grits his teeth. "Gone and there wasn't a drop of blood
around."
Saul wrings his hands and looks at
the floor. Robbie is spinning in a short cycle, sinking into depression,
exploding with anger, and trembling in fear within minutes of each other. He is
pouring a stream of vodka down his throat that spins the cycle faster. Saul
gulps when a hot swell of pity rises from his stomach and burns his throat. He
cannot look at Robbie. If he raises his head, he will see the faint tinge of
yellow coloring Robbie's tense, fluttering eyes. If he holds his gaze, Saul
will cry. The tears will flood over his cheeks, his body will shake, and Robbie
will not silence his sobbing. Saul is alone. Robbie is not here. It is Saul and
the black dog, invisible, watching and taking form through a story told by a
dying man.
"I know what you're
thinking." Robbie's voice gurgles and, when he coughs, he spits out
lime-colored phlegm. "He's a fucking crazy drunk. He's dangerous to
himself. He's dangerous to other people. I'd be thinking that too."
Robbie's eyes are wet and his right
cheek quivers. The hot swell of pity rises again and Saul reaches out to
Robbie. He pats his shoulder twice, but Robbie pulls out of his reach and
stares at him.
"You told me you were from a
town up north. What town?"
Robbie frowns and slides further
away from Saul. He lights a cigarette. "Why? Ain't gonna tell you
anything."
Saul is digging, not backing off, and
sifting through the stories, gestures, and decisions for the root causes or
conditions. He is spinning in his own cycle and, while the shifts are slower,
he wavers between probing, listening, or leaving. He smiles at Robbie and
shrugs.
"Just wondering. I'm from Indianapolis." He shrugs again. "Just trying to get to know you, that's all. You don't have to tell me, okay?"
"Just wondering. I'm from Indianapolis." He shrugs again. "Just trying to get to know you, that's all. You don't have to tell me, okay?"
Robbie opens his mouth to speak, but
pauses and sighs. "Martinsville. There you go. What's that tell you about
me?" His voice grows louder and his shoulders rise. "Huh?"
The sharp edge of anger in his voice
quickens Saul's heartbeat and causes him to squirm. "I'm sorry, Robbie, I
didn't mean to offend you, I..."
Robbie stabs out his cigarette on
the concrete floor, throws his hands through the air, and swings his head from
side to side. "My family's gone. That's what you're gonna ask now, right?
Well, save it, 'cause now you know!" He whips himself to the right, grabs
his vodka bottle, tilts it up, and drinks three long gulps.
Saul lowers his head, puckers his
lips, and nods. He knows they are orphans. They are motherless, childless, and
graying men dissolving in liquor, fading into swivel chairs and sleeping bags,
weeping in apartments and tents. Saul knows why he is here.
"It's tough, Robbie. I lost my mom just three months ago."
"It's tough, Robbie. I lost my mom just three months ago."
Robbie glares at him. Blood rushes
to his face and his wide eyes twitch. He throws his head back, screams, and
staggers to his feet. He points at Saul.
"I'm sick of your shit! Get the
fuck out of here now, you motherfucker, now!"
Saul jumps from the bed, holds up a
hand, and nods. "Whatever I've done, Robbie, I'm sorry, just calm down,
alright? I'm really sorry."
Robbie lurches a step closer to him and spits on the floor. "You're always sorry! I'm the one who's sorry, motherfucker!" He closes his eyes, sighs, and drops his head. Saul is tense, but he cannot look away. Robbie's long breaths rattle and wheeze from congestion. Saul sees him tighten his hands into fists and shake his head. He whips his head back and Saul gasps. Robbie rushes towards Saul and grabs him by the shirt. Their faces are inches apart and the smell of vodka causes him to retch.
Robbie lurches a step closer to him and spits on the floor. "You're always sorry! I'm the one who's sorry, motherfucker!" He closes his eyes, sighs, and drops his head. Saul is tense, but he cannot look away. Robbie's long breaths rattle and wheeze from congestion. Saul sees him tighten his hands into fists and shake his head. He whips his head back and Saul gasps. Robbie rushes towards Saul and grabs him by the shirt. Their faces are inches apart and the smell of vodka causes him to retch.
"Why are you still here?
Go!" Robbie opens the door and jerks Saul towards it. "Get the fuck
out!"
Saul pushes and pulls Robbie's arms,
but cannot free himself. The vodka makes Robbie stronger, infusing his body
with frantic, angry power. "Let go of me, goddammit!"
When they reach the open doorway,
Robbie shoves him and Saul tumbles backwards into the hallway. He lands hard
against the opposing wall. When he looks up, Robbie is standing in the doorway.
His skin is the color of a power blue bruise and thin red rings surround his
dark eyes. He is not screaming, smiling, pointing, speaking, or shouting. He
says nothing to Saul and slams the door shut.
***
Robbie watches his mother choke
every morning. She wants a cigarette as soon as her legs are dangling over the
edge of her bed. Robbie gives it to her and lights his own. Before she slides
on her oxygen mask, before she eats or drinks, before he helps her walk to the
bathroom, she sucks down a long filtered cigarette. The coughing and choking
start before she can finish. At first, the coughing is a dry hack, the choking
just something caught in the throat, but it flares into crippling explosions of
air and hoarse gasping for breath that doubles her over. Robbie puts his own
cigarette out and braces her shoulders to keep her from falling. She keeps the
cigarette between her fingers and her thrashing leaves wide gray halos in the
air that ring their bodies in smoke.
Throughout childhood and his
twenties, Robbie's mother Abby crackles with energy. Jumping from job to job,
wrestling with three sons while dad is drinking somewhere, or else rotting in a
jail cell, she is talking, always talking, and the words burst out of her
mouth. She moves through life the same way. Her legs bounce after sitting for
ten minutes and her hands jitter when she speaks. In his mind, Robbie sees her
pacing, pointing fingers, stomping, barking orders, asking questions. Abby is
slender, muscular, and the cloud of smoke shrouding her face billows from fires
no one can put out.
It takes six months for lung cancer
to do what no one else can. Robbie cradles her on a long December night while
she crouches over the toilet and heaves up thick, black clots of blood. By late
June, she weighs ninety pounds, gasps for air, and needs help walking to the
bathroom. When she sleeps, Robbie drinks. He is thirty, the youngest of three
brothers, and a year out of prison. It is not his first time locked up or lives
with his mother after release. Abby's oldest son, Kevin, sells cars and the
middle son, Terry, owns a gas station, but it does not matter. Robbie is her
favorite, her blind, arms open wide concession to love. He looks like his dead father.
It doesn't matter when he snatches hundreds of dollars from her purse. She
never calls the police or turns her back on him. It doesn't matter that he
drinks every dime he has and leeches off her. She blinks twice and says he
can't help it.
His brothers hate him. They grit
their teeth when Abby brushes off the arrests. Robbie isn't drunk, some asshole
cop has it out for him, or it's the crowd Robbie runs with landing him in
trouble. Who or whatever the cause, it is never Robbie's fault, but when Kevin
has a pregnant girlfriend three months after his sixteenth birthday, Abby gives
him a week to find a job and get out. Who or whatever the cause, it is never
Robbie's fault, but when the police pull Terry over on his eighteenth birthday
and haul him in for drunk driving, the first and only time Terry lands in
trouble, Abby throws his belongings into the front yard and kicks him out of
the house. Eighteen years later, whenever people ask about their brother, they
say he is dead.
Even now, with their mother dying, they will
not speak or stand in the same room with him. When they visit Abby for two
hours each afternoon, Robbie leaves the house. The brothers raises their
voices, pleading, threatening, reeling off Robbie's misdeeds, but Abby wheezes
and waves their words away. She will never make Robbie leave, he needs her, and
there's nothing else to say. The brothers bristle when she talks about Robbie's
hard life. They have the same mom, the same dad who slaps them around just as
hard and as much as their little brother and neither of them drink, do drugs,
or serve prison time. Abby breaks their hearts. They make the best of a
difficult situation, go further in life than Abby, but it isn't enough for her.
They never have it as bad as their little brother. They can never be Robbie.
Abby dreams about Robbie on the day
she dies. She is floating inches above a thick sea of smoke and gliding over
its surface. Long streaks of red, like splashes of paint, stain the powder-blue
ocean and the sky is dark. When Abby turns her head from side to side, she sees
green flares of light illuminating the distant horizon. The light does not
reach her. Nothing can touch her here. There is no coughing, there are no
cancers, and though the world is gray, Abby is whole once again, drifting in an
invisible vessel of heat.
The sea surface parts and Robbie
rises out of the ocean. His naked body is moving alongside Abby. She stares at
him. She sees he has the body of a thirty year old, but his face is eight years
old with its plump cheeks, small mouth, and clear, pink skin. I have my son
again, he is here with me, she thinks. He is whole once again.
Robbie
turns his head towards Abby and smiles. She wants to touch his face, but when
she extends her hand, the smoke rises and pulls him out of reach. He screams as
he moves away and his body begins turning into ashes. When Abby screams, red
tentacles erupt from the sea and tighten around her throat. She cannot breathe.
The tentacles are pulling her under when she wakes up, rolls out of the bed,
and falls coughing to the floor.
Robbie hears her fall. He is
standing over the toilet and, despite her steep weight loss, the impact rattles
the bathroom mirror. When he rushes into her bedroom, he spots her beside the
bed, curling into a fetal position, coughing and shaking. Her fingers are
clawing at her mouth and blood spilling off her hands puddles on the floor. She
tries to speak and scream, but spits and gasps instead. Robbie scoops her up
and places her on the bed.
When the paramedics wheel her into
the emergency room, she is vomiting streams of blood and draining her bowels
onto the hospital floor. Robbie stands in a corner, watching his mother die,
mouth gaping and fingers digging into the walls on each side of him. His
brothers are on the other side of the room. Terry is watching from a chair, his
hands covering his mouth. Kevin is on his knees, crying, face staring at the
ceiling and hands tight in prayer.
Roaring voices surround the
brothers. There are doctors barking directions, nurses shouting numbers, and orderlies
with huge eyes begging the brothers to leave the room. Everyone is glaring at
tall, beeping monitors, but the brothers are not scanning the digital screens
or listening to the voices. Robbie does not feel the pain slicing through his
fingers, Terry cannot move, and Kevin's prayer is an open mouth that cannot
speak. All senses save sight short circuit and they are staring at their
mother. Their mother, a sagging coat of skin. Their mother, thrashing and
flailing, clutching at the air, heaving and hissing out fading gasps of breath.
Their mother, pain pinning her eyes open, her short, scattered plumes of gray
hair waving side to side like thick wisps of smoke rising off her head. A loud
beep fills the room and Abby stops moving.
The doctors and nurses step back
from the bed, glance at each other, and frown. A young doctor with a blonde
crew cut, dark tan, and trim frame is standing near Robbie. He turns to face
him.
"I'm sorry." He whispers
and extends his hand to Robbie.
Robbie slumps to the floor without
looking at the doctor. He is looking at the hospital bed. All he sees of his
mother is the chalk-white sole of her foot jutting over the side of the bed.
Her foot calluses look like fat gray worms burrowing under the skin.
***
Someone, or something, is always
hitting Robbie in the head. It is a week after his attack when Saul hears that
he is hurt. The same two men who see Robbie fall off the restaurant sign are at
the community center. Saul is standing near their table when he hears that
Robbie is in the hospital. He has a concussion after a boxcar ladder on a
moving train smacks his head.
"What the fuck? How'd he manage
that shit?"
The second man chuckles and shakes
his head. He is older than the first man is. Pockmarks spot his banana-yellow skin
and when his eyes narrow, the blue teardrop tattoo looping from the corner of
his right eye disappears into a skin crease. "Dumbass tryin' to put a penny
on the rail while the train was going by."
The first man jerks his head back.
"What? Why's he want to put a
penny on a railroad tie?" He cannot stop stroking the thin patches of
facial hair curling around his jaw line.
The second man smirks and shrugs.
"Well, you know..."
"Um, no, I don't know. What?"
"He wanted to flatten the
penny, that's what. Jackie told me that shit was crazy."
"Jackie? Who's that?"
The second man furrows his brow and
bobs his head from side to side. "You know, Jackie, that fat motherfucker
who hangs out..."
The first man laughs and leans
sideways in his chair. "Oh, never mind, I know that guy. Anyway..."
"Anyway, Jackie said Robbie was
shouting crazy shit about how he didn't care about death and even if the train
hit him, it couldn't kill him. Crazy shit."
"Hah. Someone should ask him
how he feels now." They snicker. "Jackie told you what happened,
huh?"
***
After
two hits of blotter acid dissolve on his tongue, Robbie feels stronger than
death. Even when a week passes without seeing the dog, rustling trees, slamming
doors, exhaust backfires, and roaring engines jolt him. He is looking over his
shoulder, sniffing the air, and peering around corners. When he is too afraid
to leave his room, Robbie chugs vodka, stares at the door, and pictures the dog
on the other side, silent and waiting.
However, when the crackling rush of
acid surges through his nerves and swallows his mind, everything changes. His
shoulders fall, his muscles loosen. A thick, static cloud of humidity surrounds
him, but the swirling currents of heat carry him forward. He looks down and
sees his feet hovering centimeters above the ground. Let the dog come for me,
he thinks. Let it drop from the trees, slam into his door, or charge out of the
darkness. He will not run. He will face the demon, strangle it with his hands,
and spit in its dead eye. It cannot kill me, he thinks. I will outlive death.
He does not know Jackie well. Jackie
is homeless and the smell of vodka, sweat, and mildew clings to him. A few
years younger than Robbie, the deep half-ovals below his eyes, sagging jowls,
and maroon skin add ten years to his appearance. He talks a lot, always about
stealing, sex, drugs, or booze. Robbie drinks his vodka, eats his acid, and
nods.
They are sitting on a short gravel
ridge running parallel to a railroad line. The railroad line loops behind a
city park before splitting into two separate tracks. The track is a few feet
away from them and on the other side is a steep hillside. Oil and grease stains
splatter the wooden crossties and the sharp chemical smell of creosote causes
their eyes to water. The constant scalding from train wheels burns the rails
silver and they gleam in the summer sun. When Robbie stares at the rails, he
sees them swell and fall like the earth is heaving. Jackie is blabbering about
his latest women. There is a dip in the gravel between them cradling a
half-empty half-gallon of vodka.
"You tell me what you think,
tell me if I'm wrong. Susie's hanging out with these three biker lookin'
motherfuckers. One of them has booze and dope and she's rubbin' up against him,
strokin' his arm, all that shit. When these guys leave, she hops in their van
and leaves with 'em."
Robbie shrugs and looks at Jackie.
His huge eyes are red and a thick purple vein stretches from his scalp to just
above his nose. The vein weaves under his rippling skin like a tadpole swimming
in place. The vein swells from his forehead, straining against his white skin
until it breaks open. A small snakehead slithers out of Jackie's skull and
hovers above his eyes. Robbie gasps and turns his head away.
"You know what I think. Should
be obvious." Robbie says. His throat is tight and he struggles to speak.
Each time Jackie nods, he whips his
head forward like a man flinging something out of his hair. He stares at the
hill on the other side.
"It is obvious. Crystal fucking
clear. I waited around and, what do you know, the whore came back. I see them
pull up, open the door, push her outta the van, and drive off. She walks up to
me, asks for a kiss, but not only is she stoned out of her mind, she stinks of
vodka and there's white stuff smeared in her hair. Guess what that is." He
kicks the gravel hard and sends rocks flying towards the tracks. "I had to
walk away. I wanted to kill that fucking whore!"
Jackie's booming voice makes Robbie
flinch. When he looks at Jackie again, there is no snake sticking out of his
forehead. Jackie is still kicking the gravel, tugging at his shirt with both
hands like a man trying to crawl out of a sack. He is spitting out blurry slurs
that Robbie does not understand. Robbie's tongue is dry and large beads of
sweat are streaming down his face. Robbie lies down on the rocks listening to
Jackie talk, mumble, hiss, and shout, but he does not speak.
The heat, acid, and alcohol knock
Robbie out. When he opens his eyes thirty minutes later, he feels the sharp
point of a rock stabbing deep into his cheek. He does not hear Jackie. He rolls
his head away from the rock and looks for him.
Jackie is staring straight ahead,
hugging his legs, and rocking back and forth. He is mumbling, but Robbie cannot
understand him. Glistening teardrops the shape of fingertips are sliding down
his face and a jagged grimace twists his lips.
"Are you alright, man?"
Robbie asks. His tongue is dry and stumbles over the words.
Jackie jerks his head around to look
at Robbie. The sun's red glare surrounds his fluttering eyes. They are small,
gaping wounds bleeding tears onto his face.
"I've seen it. I've seen how
it'll end for me."
Robbie sits up and his stomach
churns. "What is it? What are you talking about?"
"I've seen how I'm goin' die.
And it's gonna happen soon."
Jackie's lips are trembling when he
turns his face towards the sky. Robbie sees his lips moving in a silent prayer.
The color drains out of Jackie's face when he looks at him again. He leans to
the side and vomits. Long, thick clots of blood splash onto the gravel and
Robbie shifts to dodge any splatter. Each time Jackie heaves, Robbie clutches
his hand tighter over his pounding heart.
After the vomiting stops, Jackie
starts talking. He is taking a drink when a vision appears in front of him.
Everything he sees is so real, like a high definition projection on the
tapestry of heat. He sees himself living again with his parents, but he is no
child. He is five years older, red and swollen, drinking when and whatever he
can. He locks himself in his room for days at a time and only leaves when he
runs out and needs to scavenge for more. They are whispering about no one
taking care of him when they are gone. They are waiting for him to die.
It happens at three twenty-four in the
morning. A thunderstorm crackles and whipping rain lashes the house. Jackie is
on the floor. Jackie is bleeding from his nose, mouth, and anus. When the blood
spreads across the floor and mixes with puddles of vodka, it looks like acrylic
paint. His face is darker than any blood, twice its normal size, oval, and
black veins are bulging against his maroon skin. He is trying to cry out, but
vomiting strangles his screams. Shreds and chunks of body tissue are tumbling
out of his mouth. When the television beeps with a tornado warning at three
twenty-eight, Jackie is not moving.
Jackie sees his father pounding on
his door. His father wakes up certain that something is wrong. After not seeing
Jackie for two days, fear like freezing water is rushing across him. His puffy
eyes are squinting and he pounds the door hard enough to splinter its frame.
His thin white hair jumps each time his fist hits the wood. He is certain that
Jackie is dead.
When his father bursts through the
door and sees Jackie's body, the vision dissolves. The next thing Jackie sees
are two paramedics standing in his doorway. A police officer and his parents
are standing behind them. The paramedics disappear into his bedroom. When
Jackie sees them again, they are carrying separate ends of a long white
stretcher. Jackie sees his body on the stretcher. Jackie sees the crimson
splotches of blood staining the white sheet covering his body. He cannot see
his face, hands, or feet, but he sees the steep rise of his gut and the outline
of his large, long nose. The paramedics are grunting, bracing their hips
against the walls, steering his three hundred and sixty pound dead corpse
through a narrow hallway. The paramedic walking backwards steps on his foot and
tilts to one side. When he does, Jackie watches his dead body slide across the
stretcher, slip out from under the sheet, and fall to the floor. He sees his
gray skin, fading blue eyes, gaping mouth, and the gashes and teeth marks on
his tongue.
Robbie says nothing while Jackie is
talking. He is laying on his back, spreading his legs apart, the acid and
alcohol slowing every syllable he hears. His clothes are sticking to his skin.
However, when Jackie describes seeing his own dead body tumbling onto the
hallway floor, Robbie stiffens in anger. He glares at Jackie and thinks, You
don't really want to die. You just want someone to pay attention to you and
your bullshit visions. You spit on life with your bullshit. The dog should be
chasin' you, not me.
Jackie pulls back from him. "Is
somethin' wrong, man?"
Robbie crawls across the gravel,
snatches the vodka, and takes a long drink. It has no taste, but his heart
races when it hits his stomach. His tongue is lighter, limber, and rolls across
his lips. He never stops looking at Jackie. Jackie's head is drooping, his eyes
are bobbing up and down, his shoulders are sagging, and Robbie hears a snoring
wheeze in his heavy breathing. Shoulda been someone like you, not me.
"You don't deserve to die. You
deserve to live a long time so you can lose everything." His skin burns
and sweat stings his eyes. His slow, slurring voice does not stumble over any
words. "Maybe if you make it long enough to see your parents die, you
might learn somethin' and deserve to live 'cause you aren't living right now.
You piss all over life."
Jackie narrows his eyes and
straightens his back. He jabs his index finger towards Robbie and kicks the
gravel. "Who the fuck do you think you are? I'll shut that fucking mouth
if you wanna keep running it."
A throbbing ache punctuates the tingling
Robbie feels in his hands and feet. The blanketing heat scalding his skin
causes him to squirm. He shrugs and smirks.
"You can't take the truth. You
piss on it like you do everything else. Fuck you."
Robbie hears the loud, mounting
whine of a train. He thinks, I want the dog to come right now. I want to see
this fat motherfucker stare death in the face and act all tough. I want to see
the do tear this fucker limb from limb.
Jackie lunges forward, grabs a rock,
and throws it at Robbie's head. Robbie sees it coming in time to lean sideways.
When the rock zips past his head and lands several feet behind him, Robbie
turns to look at it. It has a pear-like shape and a long, jagged shaft with a
trio of sharp corners at one end.
His fading surprise twists into a
stream of rage flowing through him. He grits his teeth and starts shaking. That
motherfucker, he thinks, and whips his head around to look at Jackie. Robbie
sees him leaning forward and bracing his palms against the ground. His eyes are
wide open and unblinking.
"Next time, I won't miss."
Jackie says in a low, droning voice.
Robbie scrambles to his feet and
charges him. Before Jackie can stand or cover up, Robbie punches him twice in
the face. Jackie lands on his back and Robbie hovers above him. When he swings
his leg back to kick Jackie, the train whistle stops him. He looks north and
sees a silver head bulging towards them through the blurring heat.
"What about you, you
motherfucker? Huh? Who the fuck do you think you are?" He clutches his
head while shouting. "You don't think you piss on life?" Jackie
snorts and coughs out a knot of blood. "You're just another wacko drunk
with a big fucking mouth."
Robbie steps back and smirks. The
rage propelling him across the gravel when he attacks Jackie is still pumping
through him and, when he inhales, his back straightens, his chest lurches
forward, and his hands flex, moving one finger at a time.
"I don't want to live. I'm
trapped beyond life and death." When Robbie says the words, a cold breeze
sweeps in, washes over him, and sinks into each pore of his skin. He feels the
freezing air funnel inside of him and it seems to lift him inches off the
ground. "I don't care about either one. I can't live and I can't
die."
Jackie scoots away from Robbie and rubs
a bump rising above his right eye. "You can't fucking die?" He arches
an eyebrow and snorts. "I think you're crazy and the acid is makin' you
crazier."
The train is moving closer. It is
simmering, surging through the haze, short plumes of smoke whispering from its
body and breaking apart when they curl towards the sky. Robbie stares at the
train, cocks his head upwards, and sucks in a lungful of air. The dog will
never kill me, he thinks. It keeps coming, keeps tryin' to kill me, but it
can't. Nothing can touch me. Not some fat fuck on acid, not any demon. I can
stand in front of that train if I want to and it would just go right through
me.
A cloud of smoke from Jackie's
cigarette washes over his face. Robbie wants a cigarette and shakes one out of
his pack. He sticks his hand into his pocket looking for a lighter and pulls it
out with a handful of change. He stares at the lighter and change. I'll show
this asshole that I'm not lying, he thinks. He plucks a penny from the pile
with his empty hand, stuffs the lighter and remaining coins back into his
pocket, and looks at Jackie.
"I'm going to prove it to
you." Robbie says with a whisper.
Jackie gulps down a mouthful of
vodka and wipes his mouth. "Prove what?"
"That I can't die."
Jackie looks at him with wide eyes,
slaps his knee, and laughs. "How are you going to do that?"
Robbie holds the penny up between
his fingertips. "I'm gonna put this penny on a rail while the train is
goin' by."
Jackie snorts. "You're fucked
up, man." He spits the words out and waves his hand at Robbie. "The
train will hit your ass and kill you."
"Nothing's gonna happen to me.
You'll see."
The train is passing them. Jackie
scurries up a gravel embankment to get away from the railroad tracks, kicking
rocks behind him, gripping the vodka bottle in one hand. The train's length
gives Robbie time to reach the tracks. The acid and alcohol short-circuit his
balance and he slides across the rocks. Boxcars are blasting past him and
blowing his hair back. The hot wind soaking his face stinks of grease and
forces him to squint. He lies on his stomach and crawls towards the rail.
Instead of fear shattering his mind, anticipation is swelling up from his
stomach and filling his mouth with a tart, syrupy taste. Instead of death, he
is thinking about life and how, chest heaving and heart racing, he is more
alive now than ever before. He is inches from the rushing train and its
rumbling wake shakes the ground under him. He clutches the penny between his
fingertips and turns his head to look at the oncoming boxcars.
I want to do it at the right time,
he thinks. I wanna do it when he thinks its gonna hit me for sure. The wheels
are spinning guillotine blades, the height of a small car, slicing grooves into
the steel. At the rear of each boxcar are long ladders with latticed steel
steps leading to the roof of the boxcar. Robbie is watching the passing wheels
and ladders. Now.
He lunges forward and drops the
penny on the rail. It bounces once and stops. When Robbie pulls back, the flat
edge of a ladder steps slams into the back of his head. The impact knocks him unconsciousness
and spins him around ninety degrees. He lands face down in the gravel and does
not move.
He sees the black dog in a dream. It
is standing in front of him on the shore of a vast, black sea of rippling
ashes. Steam hisses as it rises from the surface. The dog is larger, immense,
the size of an elephant. Robbie is on his knees and cannot close his eyes or
move his head. The dog wants him to see its face. The dog wants him to see the
toothpick bodies of his father, mother, and friend moving between its teeth.
They are flailing, screaming, and their blood is spilling onto the ground. He
is holding his breath, clinching his fists, and narrowing his eyes trying to
squeeze out one tear, but he cannot cry.
The dog stops chewing and spits
their bodies into the sea. When the crimson glow radiating from the dog strikes
them, they are mangled, burning embers sailing through the air. There is no
splash when they land and the black, swaying waves of ash swallow them. The dog
tosses its mammoth head back and snarls. It is lunging towards Robbie's throat
when it dissolves in a white flash that opens his eyes. He is awake and on his
back in a hospital bed. A web of thick white bandages criss-cross his head.
***
"Jackie was
trippin' and talked to the cops?" the young man says.
The older man shakes his head and
chuckles. "Nah, you fuckin' kidding me? He told me he wrapped his t-shirt
around his head to stop the bleeding, then left him layin' there while he ran
to a pay phone."
The young man curls his upper lips,
glances at the floor, and shrugs when he raises his head. "You know, fuck Robbie. He's a crazy asshole
anyway."
When both men laugh, Saul tightens
his grip on his plastic cup until hot coffee spills over the rim and splashes
onto the floor. He soaks up the coffee and pictures grabbing both men by their
necks, wedging his elbow into their spines, and shoving them through the door.
Saul does not want to remember
Robbie. It is not the first time someone attacks him, but Robbie's screaming,
pushing, and clutching explodes with shocking power. Saul does not want to
remember his eyes. When he sees them in his mind, they are red and yellow, pink
rimming the edges, and swell like blood blisters seconds from bursting.
Disappointment flattens Saul that night. After talking, listening, pretending
not to hear, and extending his hand to Robbie across the wide gulf dividing
their lives, his reaching rewarding him with a grip on their common grief, Robbie
throws him out of his apartment. He cannot forget him. Even when Robbie stops
coming to the community center, Saul hears coughing, slurring voices, and turns
his head to look. Even when days pass without thinking of him once, Saul sees
thin, stooping men pushing shopping carts or wearing backpacks and thinks it is
Robbie. The man is sick and doesn't want
my help, he thinks. I can't change
that, so why torture myself?
Saul is alone and dying. There is no
wife, girlfriend, son, or daughter pleading to God on his behalf, hovering
close by and shepherding him through his last days. There is no mother, father,
brother, or sister crying for him and passing on the secret grace of tying his
death to his birth and brighter days flush with family. He sees and talks to
hundreds of people each day, but has no close friends. He will lose the job,
his threadbare tether to other people, if he tells anyone he is sick.
There is a fat, black spider
covering the crown of his kidney. It is burrowing deep into the organ tissue,
growing, its purple legs wrapping around his intestines and latching into the
stomach wall. When lung cancer is ravaging his mother, Saul is breathless,
sleeping little, rushing to feed, bathe, and change her. If he is the one
taking care of her, she will get better. If
I'm her nurse, she won't die, he thinks. The spider appears on his kidney a
month after her death and doubles in size within six months.
When Saul hears he has Stage 2
kidney cancer, he wants to punch the doctor. He wants to hit him hard enough to
shatter his sculpted jaw and knock out his sparkling, ivory teeth.
***
"I
don't believe you. I'm just forty, it isn't possible. The cramps, fatigue,
shortness of breath", he shrugs, "it's from working too hard and
eating like crap. That's all." He clinches the chair armrest and crosses
his feet.
"I won't pretend to understand
what you're feeling right now. I'd be frightened out of my mind, so I don't
blame you if you are. I'm sure it's hard to accept." The doctor folds his
hands on his desktop, scoots forward in his chair, and sighs. "However,
the tests do not lie. If we have any chance of stopping the cancer and
extending your life, now is the time to act. The cancer has spread to your
intestines." He pauses, looks down at the desk, and then stares again at
Saul. "The sooner you accept what you're facing, the sooner..."
He's talking to me like I'm a
fuckin' five year old! Saul lunges forward and jabs his index finger towards
the doctor. "I don't accept your diagnosis and want a second opinion!"
The doctor holds up a palm and nods
like a man falling asleep. "No doctor is going to give you a clean bill of
health, Mr. Ivers. You're going to be dead in a year if we don't start acting
now. I understand..."
The pain in his stomach is like the
sharp corner of a desk stabbing him in his side and above his pelvis. Saul
slams his fist onto an armrest. "You don't understand a thing! I want... a
second fucking opinion... now!"
The doctor stiffens and drums his
fingers on the desktop. "Mr. Ivers, if you keep screaming, I will..."
Saul stands and stomps out of the
office. Tremors grip him after a few steps and his legs wobble at the knees.
The central air conditioning freezes his sweating skin. A door slams behind him
and footsteps are approaching. Saul will not look over his shoulder. He knows
that Death, wearing a white coat, sporting a brown tan and gold watch, is
stroking his sculpted jaw and striding towards him. Death is rushing to catch
him, to run tests, suck blood out of his body, and drug his brain. Saul races
past the receptionist and hears her shrill voice crying out his name.
When he bursts through the waiting
room door, it slams into the opposing wall. Everyone jumps. Pale, shivering,
elderly cancer patients wearing sagging skullcaps, huddling close to ashen
spouses, and younger patients with dry, withering bodies glaring at Saul from
black, telescoping eye sockets. Their eyes are tulip-yellow and round pink
warts the size of fawcett drains are dotting their orange skin. His heart is
racing, but he cannot move or look away. Saul remembers collapsing at the
community center. He still sees the staring men and women when the paramedics
are loading him into an ambulance. He knows each face. The one he helps with a
disability claim. Another one who drinks vodka, rubbing alcohol and mouthwash
when he is not rotting in jail and writing Saul letters full of greeting card
style poetry about sex, his mom, and hunting. There is the plump, slumping
teenage girl pregnant, sleeping on the streets, and snorting methamphetamine.
They need his advice and crave his attention. However, when Saul is on his back
and gripping his side, they are cringing from him. He thinks they will see him
that way forever, a white, moaning animal sprawling across a stretcher.
"Mr. Ivers, you need to sign
some paperwork before you leave."
Saul spins around when he hears the
receptionist's hoarse voice. She is young and her wide blue eyes are blinking
fast. Her chest is heaving and one hand is pressing against her hips while the
other arm dangles at her side. Saul is staring at her and nibbling on his lower
lip. He will not go back there. He knows she will not chase him when he snorts
at her, turns towards the door, and rushes outside. The heat hits him like a
blazing furnace blast and the sharp temperature change spawns a pounding
headache. He is fumbling for his car keys, panting, stumbling through the
parking lot like a man lurching forward against hurricane winds. He unlocks the
car, falls into the driver's seat, and turns the ignition with shaking hands.
The car radio is on and the crushing drumbeat causes Saul to wince. When he
opens his eyes and looks through the window, he sees a little boy standing in
front of his car. His bright blonde hair ends just above his eyebrows and his twilight-blue
eyes shine in the sunlight. He is staring at Saul, eyebrows inching up and
down, cocking his chin into the air. His mother is tugging on his hand and
telling him to come on. Saul is not looking at her. He is looking at the boy
and wrenching his hands tight around the steering wheel. What are you looking
at? What do you see? Saul hears the mother telling the boy not to look at him.
The smell of urine smothers the air. He is dizzy and pain cuts through his
stomach. He turns to his side and vomits onto the passenger seat. Dark ribbons
of blood lace the bile and curl around small brown lumps of tissue. When Saul
stops vomiting and his breathing slows, he looks up and the boy is gone.
***
When Saul walks into Robbie's
hospital room, a nurse is cradling him while he vomits into a small plastic
tub. His thin gray hair is dangling over his face and a thick white bandage
circles the upper half of his head. The bed shifts when Robbie heaves or
retches and the small, muscular nurse looping her arms around his shoulders
stops him from launching out of the bed and landing on the floor.
He quits vomiting and gasps for air.
The nurse steps back and places a hand on his shoulder. Robbie shivers when she
touches him.
"Ease back, Robbie. You're done
now. Let's hope that's the last of it."
Robbie falls backwards onto his
pillow, rubs a hand across his face, and sees Saul standing in the doorway.
Pain flares through Saul's stomach when he sees him. Black bruising covers the
right side of his face at the temple, swallowing his entire cheek, and rounding
off at his jawbone. It looks like he sleeps on his side in an oil puddle. The
lumps swelling from his forehead are closing his right eye, but he recognizes
Saul and frowns.
"Surprised to see you
here." Robbie says. He scowls when he hears the gurgling in his voice and
coughs to clear his throat.
Saul is standing a few feet inside
of the room. He pushes his hands deep into his pockets and scans the
surroundings. "Surprised to be here too." Robbie nods at him and tilts
his head to the side when he sees Saul peering at his bandages and bruising.
Saul looks at the window and frowns.
"Surprised to see you breathing after the story I've heard," he says.
Robbie lowers his head.
"Yeah." His voice is a flat drawl. He looks up at the nurse.
"Can you leave us alone?"
The nurse nods, pats him on the arm,
and smiles. "Of course. I'll come back a little later."
Robbie nods, leans his head
backwards, and closes his eyes. The nurse leaves the room. "Sit down if
you want", he says.
Pain slashes across the right side
of his stomach when he bends to sit in the bedside chair. Sweat sprouts from
his forehead, his knees buckle, and he clutches his stomach when he slumps into
the seat. Robbie stares at him and puckers his lips.
"Are you sick?"
Saul coughs and nods. "Yeah,
stomach flu. Just now getting over it."
Robbie nods. "Nasty shit."
He turns his head towards the window and looks into the cloud of light flooding
the room.
Why
am I lying to him? If I told him I was dying, maybe he'd open up. Maybe he'd
let me know more about him. However, Saul freezes inside when he opens his
mouth to speak. No one knows he is dying and Robbie will not be the first to
hear it.
He is clinging to the idea that not
talking about it drains its power. If he does not see his body or look in a
mirror, it will not be staring him in the face. If he wakes and falls asleep at
the same time, drives the same streets, eats the same foods, drinks his coffee
and tea, and watches the same television shows every day, it will not be living
in his stomach, spreading and worming through organs and tissue. If he throws
himself headlong into other's lives, dropping his own desires, it will forgive
him for living when others do not and spare him for now.
He lowers his head and looks up at
Robbie. "So... what happened, Robbie?"
Robbie's wide eyes fill with tears.
"You heard all about it. You know what happened."
"I'd rather hear it from you.
If you want to tell me."
Robbie turns his head and gazes at
the window again. "The booze and acid made me crazy." He stops
talking, but his mouth is still opening and closing. "I wanted to be free.
I felt so strong, so powerful, that I thought I could break free of the
dog."
"And putting a penny on a
railroad tie while a train is moving is your way of doing that?" Saul
hears the shrill, whining frustration in his own voice. Watch it, take it easy. If he feels like you're putting him down, this
isn't going to go well.
"I felt free. Wanted to show
that dog and the fucker with me that I wasn't scared anymore." He frowns
and stares at the floor. When he raises his head, Robbie glances at Saul and
shrugs. "I know it was fucked up. I
was fucked up."
He is whispering and slurring every
word. A translucent chemical gleam fills his drooping eyes, but his shifting
gaze scans the windows, furniture, ceiling, and walls like a prisoner surveying
the dimensions of their cell.
"My mom came to me in a dream
last night," Robbie says. He pauses between the words and turns his head
from side to side while speaking.
Saul sighs and his muscles loosen. He's talking, he's opening up a little. "How
long has your mom been dead?" He keeps his voice low and draws each word
out, easing him into the question.
"Ten years."
"What happened in the
dream?"
Robbie's narrow eyes glare at him.
While Saul sees suspicion in his gaze, he sees pleading tension in the
twitching corners of each eye and the faint trembling of his eyebrows. Robbie
tilts his head back, closes his eyes, and starts speaking.
He is in his mother's house. He is
walking through the rooms, but cannot steer his steps. Instead, invisible hands
grip his legs below the hips and above the shins. They swing his legs back and
forth, but his feet are not touching the floor. His long steps are treading the
air. The biting smell of burning hair is thick and causes his stomach to turn.
He is in the living room. He sees
the dark flecks of dust spotting the white drapes and the light brown shag
carpet. The fraying sandstone color couches, black leather recliner, and long
walnut coffee table are here. There is a clean, sparkling glass ashtray and
pile of envelopes sitting in the middle of the table. Robbie sees the few
pictures hanging on the walls. There is one school picture of each son and a
small, fading black and white photo of his grandparents. He says the room looks
like it does on the day she dies.
He hears coughing in his mother's
bedroom. The door muffles the sound, but the coughing stutters like a
sputtering car. When he glides towards the door, the stink of burning hair
chokes him. The door swings open and a blast of smoke erupts from within.
He sees four black figures
surrounding his mother. They have a human form, but their fluttering
proportions shift whenever they move. They are clutching his mother's hands,
holding her ankles together, while she twists and squirms in their grasp.
Robbie says she looks like she does on the day she dies.
They are thrusting her into a long
black sack held by a fifth dark figure. Glossy, reptilian skin covers the sack
and red ropes dangle from its wide mouth. While the other dark figures pull and
tug his mother towards the sack, this figure towers over them and does not
move. It is a gaping black cavity with thick, obsidian limbs.
Cancer withers her arms into gristle
and thin, sagging skin, but she is clubbing the dark hands seizing her. Even if
cancer strips her voice, Robbie hears her fast, stuttering cough and knows she
is screaming. Her eyes are spinning, springing open, narrowing, and, despite
the fear gripping her mind, never looks away from her attackers. Robbie says he
cannot move or talk. He knows she will not fight them off. No matter how many
times she hits them, squeezes screams from her throat, and stares them down,
they will kill her again.
Robbie says the four dark figures
stop moving and shatter into thick clouds of smoke. He sees his mother
standing, back straight, feet together, and facing the last dark figure. Her
arms are round, tan, and light pink freckles cluster near the shoulders. Her
clear blue eyes are staring at the dark figure, but they do not spin or close.
Her naked body has no surgical scars, bruises, or blisters. There are no
wrinkles on her slender, muscular frame. She is young here.
The dark figure lunges towards her
and wraps a black ring around her. The ring tightens, wrenching her waist and
stomach, but she does not move. The figure lifts her high into the air before
stuffing her into the sack. The figure turns to Robbie, holds the sack high in
the air, and disappears.
Robbie stops talking and looks at
the window. He is opening and closing his eyes like someone fighting off sleep.
Saul stares at him for a few seconds before leaning back in his chair.
"That's it?"
Robbie turns his head and shrugs.
"You need more?" He coughs, rolling onto his side, blood veins
creasing his red face. "That's it, the whole thing. I woke up here."
"And the dog?"
"There's no dog, man." He
swings his head fast from side to side. "I know there's never been a
dog."
When he hears those words, Saul
sinks into his chair. He pulls his head back and coughs. What's happened to him? Has he turned some kind of corner because a
train hit him? "Really?" He arches an eyebrow. "How'd that
happen?"
"Realizing there's no
dog?" Saul nods and sees a large teardrop sliding down Robbie's cheek.
Robbie sighs." Man, it was that train, and then that dream... it was Death in that dream... not some dog. A
fucking message." Robbie hisses
the final words and his chin drops to his chest.
He's
turning the wrong corner, Saul thinks. Instead of smashing through the
fear, rage, and delusion blocking his path, the train's impact hurtles him
deeper towards death. There is no dog now. Instead, there is black death
ballooning around him, rising and swirling, shadowing his life.
"Maybe it isn't any of that,
Robbie," Saul says. His eyes widen when he hears his small, trembling
voice. "Maybe you're just not well and need help."
Robbie's head rolls towards him. He
looks Saul in the eyes, frowns, and then turns his gaze towards the floor.
"I thought you'd be happy. If anyone would be happy right now, it'd be
you." He sighs. "But you don't get it. Not one fuckin' bit." He
spits out the final word, turns his head away, and closes his eyes.
Sweat covers Saul's face and a
faint, cool wave of air conditioning from a vent above laps against his
tingling skin. The dull, heavy ache in his head feels like a fist grinding into
his forehead. The pain is so bad that Saul wants to slump, cup his face in his
palms, and cry. He wipes the sweat off his forehead with his shirtsleeve
"What's to get? Robbie, I don't mean any disrespect, I know you've been
through a lot, but do you get it?
Don't you see how crazy it was?" Saul leans forward. "You put your head near the wheels of a moving train.
That's crazy enough, but for what? To put a penny on a rail and prove you
weren't afraid to die? That you aren't afraid of this dog that you say has been
chasing you for years?" When the torrent of words subsides and Saul
exhales again, his entire body trembles.
Robbie stares at him. Even if a
chemical sheen glazes his eyes, there is a hair-raising intensity in his gaze.
It never wavers and he does not blink. Saul sees his right hand clinching a bed
sheet and, when it relaxes and uncoils, his fingers leave an impression on the
ball of white fabric.
"You've finally said what's
been on your mind the whole time. That's good. Feel fucking better?"
Robbie says. He grits his teeth and hisses out each word. "Fuck it. I
don't give a damn what you don't get.
My life's almost over and that's fine with me. I understand things that you
don't have a clue about." He grunts and shifts his body in the hospital
bed. When he looks at Saul again, he puckers his lips before speaking.
"I've been scared of death since my mom died. My dad wasn't worth a fuck,
my mom was the only thing I had. The nightmares, the dog, it was all just
death, and it was gonna come for me just like it came for my mom."
Saul's temper flares again. I'm fucking dying and listening to a crazy
asshole babble about his dead mom and he tells me that I don't get it. Fuck
him. Saul leans back in the chair and sneers. "And it's coming for you
now, right? You said your life is over. It's coming for you and there's no
escape?" Saul shrugs. "Sounds like the dog story to me. Just a little
different."
Robbie presses his lips together,
closes his eyes, and whips his head from side to side. "I... said... you
don't get it." He stops moving his head and stares at Saul. "My
insides are all messed up, it's gonna happen sooner instead of later."
Robbie claps his hands, sits up in bed, and jabs a finger in Saul's direction.
"This is what it is, motherfucker. When the day comes, when I die, I'm
ready to go. I saw that in my mom. In that dream, she was ready to go." He
sighs and falls back on the bed. He licks his lips and presses his hand against
his heaving chest like a man trying to slow his breathing. "I forgive it.
I forgive life for taking my mom and I forgive it for killing me like it will.
It can come whenever it wants to," Robbie says. When his voice cracks on
those final words, he shudders and turns his face away from Saul.
Saul cannot talk. His mouth is
hanging open and a cold chill ripples across his body. Forgive? You can't forgive death, he thinks. Even if Saul forgives the sharp nudges pumping into his side, the
mounting blasts of pain augmenting the nudges, the streams of vomit, and the
sudden layers of sweat covering his skin, it has no meaning. Watching his
mother die three months before bleeds out Saul's capacity for forgiveness.
***
Saul
sits by her bedside while lung cancer consumes her one cough at a time. Unlike
Robbie's mother, Saul's mom quits smoking when the doctor delivers the news, but
it is too late. The cancer moves fast and her breathing is soon shallow, thin, and
echoes like she is breathing into a metal can. Each night at her bedside, Saul
thinks about being two years old when his father disappears, how his mother
raises him alone with no grandparents, uncles, or aunts to extend a hand. Saul
spends his first ten years seeing life as him and mom standing against the
world.
He thinks about the cigarettes. The
long filters with their perforated rings and billowing gray banks of smoke
filling the air with the smell of tobacco, tar, and lighter fluid. He remembers
her smoking one after another, stubbing one out as she takes a new one, and the
way that she holds her arm up on a table, cigarette between the knuckles of her
index and middle fingers. Her fingers on both hands are stiff and never relax.
He hates what cigarettes have done to his mother, stripping the muscle from her
body, decaying her skin, and choking her while their spawn devours her insides.
When he pats her arm while she coughs, Saul hates her too. He hates her for
deserting him. She is not standing with him against the world and he hates her
for encouraging that coddling lie. Cocking her chin upwards, tilting her head
back, and smiling, Saul's mother eyes him with pride all of his life and, by
the power of her stare alone, propels him through childhood, school, and into
adulthood. He hates her because he needs her. There is no approving stamp of
self-affirmation within Saul, no wife to listen, no children of his own, just
an apartment, a diploma, and his job. Everything depends on her, but sitting
next to her hospital bed and remembering her crumpling millions of empty
cigarette packs, smelling the thick cloudbanks of tobacco smoke rising from her
frozen fingers, Saul sees himself streaking across the thin ice of her hysteria
since birth. The smoking holds her together and he hates her for it.
It takes four days for her to die. As
the silence between each coughing fit grows shorter, as his mother slips in and
out of consciousness, mumbling vowel sounds when her eyes are open, wheezing
when they close, his hate cools and softens into a breathless sense of pity
that keeps him crying hours out of the day. Instead, Saul turns his fury on
life. What do I have? I have my job and the idea that I help people. That's it,
he thinks. He does not smoke, but when he sees his mother thrashing, babbling,
and shivering, he knows that his own death may be as painful, if not more so,
and the thought fills him with a hate stronger than anything he feels before.
After his mother dies and they bury her, Saul will take a few days off before
returning to work. When he goes back, the same ragged parade of the poor and
homeless will sit across from him like Robbie does the first time they meet,
and Saul will nod and scribble while he pries his heart open again for the lost
and hurting men and women asking for his help again. When Saul winces during
her coughing fits, grips her hands during the waking moments, and strokes her
shriveling skin while she sleeps, he thinks that the reward for his caring is
nothing more than dirt in the face and hates life and death alike.
After the coughing stops and she
closes her eyes for the last time, Saul busies himself with her funeral. He
stands at the foot of the casket, legs spreading apart as if he will bolt out
of the building at any second, shakes hands, nods when he needs to, mutters his
thank yous, and buries her next to his father within three days.
He takes three weeks off from work
and drinks for two. During those two weeks, he leaves his apartment only for
alcohol and hamburgers and drives through the city in a daze. Even if there is
a car seat beneath him, a steering wheel in his hands, and the purr of the
engine rattling his body, the physical sensations are not registering and he
feels like his consciousness is hovering outside of his body like a sleeve of
sunlight clinging to a dark horizon. By the first day of the third week,
suicide looms over his thoughts.
Passing out on his kitchen floor and
waking up in a puddle of urine saves his life. This is not the first time he
passes out and urinates on himself. Before, when he opens his eyes and the
musky odor stings his nose, he frowns, struggles to his feet, strips off the
wet clothes, and staggers into the shower. However, this time he opens his
eyes, his cheek sticks to the dry whiskey covering the linoleum, and when he
rolls over onto his back, a blast of cool air from the ceiling vent sweeps
across him and he knows he is wet. He shivers, pain spikes his stomach, and he
turns on his side to vomit. When he regains his breath, disgust floods his mind
and causes him to shake as he struggles into a kitchen chair. He hunches over
and clutches each elbow with his opposing hand. This ends today. I am not
heaping misery on top of misery, he thinks. He is screaming inside, shouting
down the invisible phantoms pushing him deeper into despair. I'm not going to
give up. No matter what life is or isn't, I've got to learn how to live it.
He sobers up and returns to work the
next week, staying late at the community center and filling out paperwork to minimize
the time he spends awake and alone in his apartment. The stomach pain he feels
that night on the kitchen floor returns as well. He drinks herbal tea, eats
rolls of antacid tablets, and gives up coffee, but the pain keeps coming, not
just stabbing him anymore, but also radiating around his side and numbing his
upper legs for minutes at a time.
When he flees the doctor's office
after hearing the diagnosis, he takes two days off from work and does not leave
his apartment. He does not start drinking again or think about killing himself.
He closes the window shades, turns his phone off after calling in to work, and
crawls into bed. Veering between short bursts of tears, pounding the mattress
with his fists, sleeping for a few hours, and staring at the ceiling, he thinks
about his mother a great deal. He is afraid to believe, even for a second, that
he will see her again. However, in the quiet overnight hours of those two days,
Saul thinks that even if he never sees her again, he will die like her, and in
those final days he will join her by sharing the same experience. With his side
throbbing and his stomach aching, the thought that he will soon know what dying
was like for her gives him a cold, brittle sense of happiness.
Until those days are bearing down on
him, he will live his life. He will not drink himself into a stupor, gulp down
a handful of pills, or blow his head off. He will not pre-empt death as a way
of defying it. Instead, he will grit his teeth when the pain comes and clutch a
chair arm or the edge of a desk. He will smile and excuse himself when the
nausea rises, locking the bathroom door, and turning on the ceiling fan before
filling the toilet with bile and blood. Saul will keep showing up for work,
holding it together as long as he can, and he will listen to any pleading voice
bending his ear. The alcoholics living in tents will get bags of noodles,
powdered milk, and bread. The pregnant women will get referrals, vouchers, and
extra groceries. There's no other choice. There's no hope for me, but I've got
to keep going. Nothing can save him, but nothing can stop him from living until
he dies.
***
When Saul cannot see the change
sweeping over his life, Robbie tells him to get out. The man does not believe
anything he says, so Robbie will not waste his breath straining to convince him
otherwise. He spits out the words, turns his head away, and listens to Saul's
chair slide across the limestone floor. He says nothing when he leaves, but
Robbie fixes his hearing on the hollow snap of his footsteps receding into the
hospital. If he doesn't believe me, fuck
him. That's not my problem, Robbie thinks.
Robbie's problem is getting out of
this hospital and getting a drink. Unless someone ransacks his apartment during
his time in the hospital, he has a half-gallon of vodka waiting for him. He
wonders if he can even find his way there. The doctor tells him yesterday that
he has a major concussion and is lucky to be alive. Lucky to be alive. The thought makes him chuckle. If this is luck,
he wants no part of it. A moving boxcar ladder slamming into his head when he
is placing a penny on a rail brings him three inches away from death, according
to the doctor, and Robbie wants to leave after a day so he can drink vodka.
There is no dog, no snarling demon lurking in the shadows. For the first time,
Robbie knows he is physically and mentally sick and not one shiver, frown, or
sigh marks this realization. After regaining consciousness in the hospital,
piecing his memories together, and grasping that realization for the first
time, Robbie's head tilts back, his eyes turn towards the ceiling, and his lips
open in a wide smile. When he gets out of the hospital, he will go to his
apartment, get the vodka, pack up his tent, and go to the nearby woods. He will
set up camp, crawl inside the tent, and drink until his luck runs out.
When Robbie tells his nurse that he
is leaving, she widens her eyes and the color drains from her face. She says
nothing, spins on her heel, and strides out of the hospital room. Robbie is sitting
on the edge of his bed when the nurse follows the doctor into the room. The
doctor pleads with Robbie to stay another day, wagging his finger, slapping his
palms together for emphasis. However, when Robbie shouts that he will tear the
hospital wing to shreds looking for his clothes if someone doesn't bring them
now, the doctor tosses his hands into the air, sighs, and tells the nurse to
prepare Robbie's discharge papers.
As he walks out of the hospital,
Robbie crumples the doctor's prescriptions and drops the wads in a trash can. His
lungs tighten when he inhales the humid evening air. He braces himself against
a stone pillar near the hospital entrance while he regains his breath and looks
at everything. The sun is sinking behind a steep ridge of dense clouds the
color of soot that lingers near the horizon and stretches parallel across the
overcast sky. The shrill glare of yellow streetlights punches bright ovals in
the dimming twilight and reminds Robbie of Christmas tree lights. Street
traffic is thin and the faint hum of cars driving throughout the city sounds
like a ceiling fan spinning at half-speed. It is not raining and Robbie hears
no thunder, but the odor of mold blankets his sense of smell and he feels a
light, nagging static charge clinging to his skin. He wants to get to his
apartment before the rain starts falling.
The sun seems to drop below the
skyline when Robbie crosses the street. He stops on the sidewalk and furrows
his brow. His blurry focus makes it difficult to concentrate and he is not sure
which way to go. White headlight beams sweep over him, hitting his chest and
face, and look like the glowing eyes of hunting animals. A dense ridge of
clouds muffles the moonlight like a flashlight shining under a thick blanket
and swirling gusts of warm wind tug on rustling tree canopies. When Robbie sees
the darkening form of a multi-level parking garage near his apartment, he
starts walking in that direction.
He cuts through a small city park
before entering a residential area. The one-floor houses sit on long, narrow
lots with tidy green lawns. The tall poles spewing out blazing fluorescent
domes of light at each street corner burn with brightness that washes out every
color in its reach. The intensity unsettles Robbie and he skirts around the
edge of each sphere when he passes.
When he sees the railroad tracks, he
knows he will find his way to the apartment. He walks on the tracks more than
the city sidewalks. It is fertile ground for picking up aluminum cans and other
scrap metal and, when he drinks too much, hides him from the probing eyes of
police patrols. He stumbles across crossties in the scarce light, but follows
the tracks north until they end a block from his apartment.
He sees no one while walking into
his apartment and finds the half-gallon of vodka behind his bed. He packs up
his tent, a change of clothes, jams the vodka bottle into his backpack, and
sees no one when he leaves. After he drops the apartment key into the owner's
mailbox, he walks back to the railroad tracks.
There are tracts of dense wilderness spread throughout the city and flanking its network of intersecting rail lines. Robbie decides to put up his tent near a railroad junction behind a westside city park. As he follows the railroad track, the sharp chemical smell rising from black splatters of creosote on the railroad crossties makes his head ache. His heart flutters when he looks at the gleaming pinholes of distant city lights. They are the watching eyes of faceless animals, shapeless beasts lurking in the night, and despite the fact that he is near the edge of the city, the pinholes are multiplying as he walks and glitter in the surrounding blackness. Robbie stops and drinks vodka in the dark.
There are tracts of dense wilderness spread throughout the city and flanking its network of intersecting rail lines. Robbie decides to put up his tent near a railroad junction behind a westside city park. As he follows the railroad track, the sharp chemical smell rising from black splatters of creosote on the railroad crossties makes his head ache. His heart flutters when he looks at the gleaming pinholes of distant city lights. They are the watching eyes of faceless animals, shapeless beasts lurking in the night, and despite the fact that he is near the edge of the city, the pinholes are multiplying as he walks and glitter in the surrounding blackness. Robbie stops and drinks vodka in the dark.
He finds the mouth of the trail to
his new campsite and walks into the woods. He slips and falls when he climbs
the narrow trail snaking up the steep hillside. The ground is a thick soup
beneath his feet. When he reaches the top of the hillside, the trail widens,
but the trees are closer together and larger in every way. Robbie stumbles over
bulging roots in the ground, but never falls. The clearing is not far and he is
walking fast, blundering through the darkness, for a place where he can sit
down.
It cannot be here. Too many eyes are
watching him and the dense woods limit his vision. If he sits down on the trail
and they decide to come for them, he will not see them coming. If he can reach
the clearing, he can stake his tent, build a fire, and drink. Robbie sees
hundreds of eyes watching him from the darkness, but he does not know what is
watching him. When he sees the trail widening ahead of him, a deep sigh wilts
his body and his knees buckle for a second.
He collapses in the clearing, pulls
his backpack and tent off, and gets out his half-gallon of vodka. After he takes
a long drink, the alcohol slows his heartbeat, his head slumps to the ground,
and he closes his eyes. Everything is
okay. I'm here and no one will ever find me. There's nothing out there watching
me. A hot splash of wind rolls over his body and Robbie smiles. This is where it ends. I'll get my tent set
up and build a fire.
It starts as a whirling sound. He
hears something whirling behind him, spinning faster and faster, and the wind
at his back blows harder, hotter, stinging his skin. When Robbie raises his
head, the hundreds of eyes he sees earlier in the darkness are gone. He looks
up and cannot see the moon. It sounds like an immense threshing machine is
tearing the forest apart behind him. He hears the loud cracks of splintering
wood, the screeching and scratching of colliding limbs, but he will not turn to
look behind him. He is wincing, staring straight ahead, and wrapping his arms
around his knees. Sweat is bubbling out of his skin. He wants to get out of
here. He tells himself this is not happening. He wipes the sweat off his face
with his forearm and sees the black dog moving towards him.
***
Saul strides out of the hospital set
on forgetting Robbie forever. You are dying, asshole, not him. He just wishes he was. Wanting to help
people in your dying days is fine, but that guy is beyond all help. Spare
yourself the hassle. He drives home sneering, pictures Robbie in his
hospital bed, and hears him babbling about death. If you only knew, Robbie. If you only knew.
A week passes before he thinks about
him again. Saul is at the community center and stepping out of the bathroom
when he hears the story. Dave, an overweight man with a graying beard and an
American flag bandana covering his balding head, stomps over to him. He tells
Saul that both the radio and Internet are reporting that a man matching
Robbie's description is blocking train traffic on the city's westside. When
police arrive, the man runs and disappears. Even without Dave saying his name,
Saul knows it is Robbie. Dave says that the man has blood covering his body and
blocks the train by kneeling between the rails.
"What else?" Saul says.
Dave shrugs and twists his mouth.
"That's it. I guess the cops are still lookin' for the guy." He
stares at Saul for a moment, leans his head back, and smiles. "You think
you know who it is, don't you? You look like you do."
Saul frowns and shrugs. "Maybe.
Who knows, right?" He pats Dave's shoulder and smiles. "We get all
kinds around here, don't we?"
Dave laughs. "Yeah and they're
all fucking nuts like that guy!"
They both laugh before Dave walks
away. Saul sees no need to share his suspicions with Dave. He may not even know
Robbie, but Saul smiles, slaps him on the shoulder, and Dave never knows what
Saul is thinking.
Robbie's
lost it. That's obvious. Saul wonders about the blood. Has someone hurt him? Has he hurt himself or someone else? He
imagines Robbie kneeling between the rails, blood covering him from head to
toe, and shivers. Sharp bolts of pain flashing across his midsection cause him
to clinch his stomach. When the pain fades, he sees Robbie's face in his mind,
the deep rivets in his coarse skin, his blood-shot eyes, and swollen purple
lips. He doesn't have anyone. He's all
alone out there, dying. I don't have anyone. We're both alone.
***
Saul is driving west. The same
towering wave of pity that sweeps over him when he sees Robbie fall off the
sign, live through a beating, or survive being hit in the head by a train,
carries him to his car and has him driving towards the city's edge. He has
nothing but a feeling to go on, but believes Robbie's camp is behind a small
park on the outskirts of town.
His stomach is boiling, fluid
swishing from side to side, and his hands are clinching the steering wheel. He
squeezes the stiff leather hard enough that his hands are throbbing in pain,
but he will not loosen. The grinding ache gloving his hands pushes back against
the fury raging in his stomach. It sharpens his focus, locks his eyes on the
road, and centers his thoughts. During the last week, he has dreams where pain
is a living ladder. It is no snake with rungs, but a weaving, breathing web of
intersecting eyes. Each eye is different with varying colors, shapes, and
sizes, and though each eyelid is a rung, they never blink. Instead, as Saul climbs
down the web, a blast of pain devours any part of his body touching the web,
buckling his legs, weakening his arms, but he does not fall. He closes his eyes
and grits his teeth. I will not hurt, I
am going to a better place, I must not fall, I am going to a better place. His
heartbeat slows in the dream and he opens his eyes, but just when the pain
fades, it comes roaring back. He winces, teeters off the edge of an eyelid, and
wakes up each time.
The dreams reflect the course of his
waking life over the last seven days. In that week, the pain pulls him closer
to the edge of the abyss forcing Saul to dig in his heels to survive. He grips
steering wheels until his hands turn white, grits his teeth until his jawbone
aches, and, the day before, slams a desk drawer shut on his left hand to erase
his stomach pain, and in the throbbing wake of those moments, the dueling
agonies cancel each other out and a sense of balance returns to him. However,
just as quick as the throbbing subsides, invisible claws dig into his side,
slash through his stomach, and misery fogs his brain again.
The park is in a poor residential
neighborhood and buffers a railroad junction and acres of surrounding trees.
After years of dealing with the homeless, Saul knows the dozen or so locations
throughout the city drawing the homeless to set up campsites and most choose
this wilderness. They choose it for the towering oaks and maples with wide
canopies standing alongside short, dense pine trees and the thick underbrush
choking off passage between the trees and hiding the jagged network of narrow
trails intersecting the land. They pick it because it is walking distance to
downtown, near a city bus stop, and the crumbling walking trail ringing the
park's borders, two small shelter houses, and a slumping swing set attracts few
local residents to spend time there. Saul walks towards the other side of the
park where the railroad tracks run behind a line of pine trees.
He finds a trail leading through the
pine trees and stands alongside the railroad tracks. He looks both directions,
sees nothing, but spots a trail opening on the other side of the tracks that
goes into the woods. When he takes a step towards the railroad tracks, pain
tears through his hips and radiates through his legs. He starts to fall when
his knees buckle, but throws out a hand to catch his fall. He plants his hand
into a triangular rock with a narrow point and cuts his hand open. The slice is
short and very shallow, but a trickle of blood ekes out over his hand and the
scar stings. Saul licks up the trickle of blood and it has a thick, salty
taste. He pushes himself to his feet, brushes his hands together, and steps
across the railroad tracks.
When he walks into the woods, the
world darkens by a half. The interweaving trees and underbrush form a natural
wall and ceiling that seals the wilderness off from the light. The colors are
different. Out of the sun's reach, blossoming fountains of green plants retain
their dark luster and sprout in every direction. The smells change. The white,
rigid odor of fresh cut grass overwhelms him in the park, but the wilderness
air is thick with loud, brawling scents that cause him to swoon.
Saul is standing at the intersection
of two trails. After regaining his composure, he calls out for Robbie and
identifies himself by name, but there is no answer. Saul frowns, but the
silence does not shake his certainty that Robbie is somewhere out here or
nearby. He picks a path to take and walks deeper into the wilderness.
With each new step, the temperature
seems to climb. Humidity covers his face and arms with a thin layer of moisture
and mosquitoes as large as thumbnails are hovering around his eyes and buzzing
in his ears. Saul wipes the sweat away and focuses on keeping his balance. The
narrow trail is little more than a bare thread of earth, never straight,
twisting around and between trees, with steep dips and thick tree roots along
the way. As Saul walks, the rising heat blurs his surroundings and a dark
sapphire tint colors everything he sees.
Saul sees the trail turning ahead
and, when he looks past the turn, sees long tree limbs jutting diagonally out
from a green thicket of vines. The trail widens and he sees a small clearing.
The vines are roping a trio of tall oaks in a half circle near the edge of the
clearing. When Saul steps closer, he sees tent fabric through the thicket of
vines and calls out Robbie's name again. He hears the distant hum of the city.
Saul is about to call out for him again when seeing Robbie's camp for the first
time shocks him and chokes his voice.
The tent is in shreds and blood
covers everything. It slides down the trees and forms glistening crimson pools
in the earth. It drips from the tent frame, blackens the loose clothes, and
fills any coffee cups, glasses, or containers that are still intact. Though
nothing is burning, the smell of smoke floods Saul's nose and he vomits. When
he stops, Saul wipes his mouth and backs away from the camp. Oh my god. What the fuck happened? Is he
dead? Saul stares at the horror, unable to move, his mind echoing with
those words.
He hears a scream and spins around.
The scream comes from behind him, but he sees nothing after scanning the
wilderness. He hears another scream. It is a man screaming hundreds of feet
away near the railroad tracks. Saul hears nothing else, no talking, and no
cries for help or pleas for mercy. When he hears the scream again, it is
louder, the anguish deeper, and seems to linger in the air. Once again, Saul
cannot move, nor can he summon the courage to call out to the screaming man.
When the screams grow louder and the
silence between each one shrinks, fear overwhelms Saul and he starts racing
back the way he came. They're killing
him! Someone's killing him! He gasps Robbie's name as he runs, stumbling
over tree roots, falling once when he steps in a dip, his clothes tearing on
briars as he rushes past. There is just one scream now, continuous, wailing
without end at a volume that makes Saul's head ache.
The volume reaches its peak when
Saul reaches the mouth of the trail. He cannot see anything from where he
stands, but the man is on the railroad tracks, no more than fifty feet away. The
furious pounding of Saul's heartbeat, like the screaming, merges into a single
mammoth throb that shakes his body. As he steps closer to the source of the
screaming, sweat drips from his eyebrows and rolls down his cheeks, his legs
are trembling, and his quaking lips cannot speak. He cranes his head trying to
look around the corner of underbrush and trees blocking his view, but he still
cannot see.
The grunting he hears sounds like
the legs of a heavy wooden chest sliding across a concrete floor. There is
snorting too, coarse and guttural, like a gurgling car exhaust pipe. The
roaring subsides and the world slows when he moves. Oh my god, oh my god, he thinks, the words locking into a loop
around his brain.
When Saul steps out of the
wilderness onto the railroad tracks again, he sees Robbie. He is fifty feet
away, on his knees between the rails, outstretching his arms to the side and turning
down his palms. His head is hanging back, his frozen mouth screaming, and the
blood smears covering his face do not hide his rust-color skin. His naked body
shares the same color, gashes and scars mark his dark skin, and blood is
gushing from a gaping wound on his left side. Blood rushes from wide claw marks
across his chest and puddles in the gravel below his knees.
Saul turns his head and sees the
dog. It stands five feet in front of Robbie, scraping its triangular front
claws through the gravel, tossing its head from side to side, and crackling
halo of fire circles its head like a crown. Its black body heaves each time it
rakes its claws, the fur rising and falling in waves. The dog's narrow, yellow
eyes are not looking at him. Saul does not take another step, but his body is
convulsing with fear. His thoughts are syllables, stuttering half-words lacking
shape or meaning.
Saul's knees are shaking and he
collapses to the ground in a sitting position. The dog jerks its gaze towards
Saul, snorts, and its mouth droops open before curling into a wide, terrifying
smile. I'm gonna die! It's gonna kill us
both! After staring into the eyes of the dog and seeing its smile, Saul
feels like a giant battering ram is swinging through the air and slamming into
his sternum. He is gasping for air, his body throbbing from the waist up, and
teetering on the brink of cardiac arrest.
The dog stares at Saul, its smile
never leaving its face, cocking its head from side to side. Without warning,
the dog flings its head back, rolls its long red tongue out of its mouth, and
screams. The shattering immensity of the scream dwarfs all sound and spawns
spasms of pain throughout Saul's body. When he moves his hands to cover his
ears, the dog whips its head forward, its mouth wide, black drops of saliva
dripping from its tongue, and swallows Robbie with one bite. It gulps once
before taking two steps back, sitting on its haunches, and raising its head
towards the sky. It is not looking at Robbie.
Saul stares at the black dog in the
sun. There is a wide, red lip of sunlight dividing its body. Unlike before, a
dark green fire dances across one side of its body while the other side is
black. Its eyes glitter in the sunlight, but they do not blink or shift. There
is no smile crossing its broad hammerhead and its long tail spools on the
ground. When it turns its head from the sun and looks back at Saul, it
stretches out its legs and lies down between the rails. It opens its mouth,
closes its eyes, and does not move.
Saul is lame with fear and does not
attempt to run away. He stares at the black dog in the sun, shivering, shaking,
holding his legs together, wrapping his arms around his knees, and his wide,
blood-shot eyes cannot stop blinking. No matter how many times he closes his
eyes, the dog is there when they open. It does not move and its mouth is dark.
The smell of raw meat fills the air and, despite the bright sun and blue skies
around him, the chill clinging to his body is colder than anything he has ever
known.
Time loses its shape for him. The
sun and clouds alike do not move and Saul cannot gauge the passage of the
minutes and hours. Despite the cold gripping him, the thick humidity is fogging
his vision and muddling his thoughts. A growing sense of exhaustion presses
down on him, constricting his breathing, tightening his throat, and weighing
down his eyes. He is sure the dog will devour him if he falls asleep and sees
it happening each time he closes his eyes. It is the only clear thought he has.
He sees the slow closing of his eyes, slumping and rolling onto his back, and
then the dog rising and plodding across the gravel. The dog will tower over his
prostrate body and smile again before its lunges and devours his body. Like
Robbie, he will vanish and, like Robbie, no one will ever find him. I can't fall asleep I can't fall asleep I
can't fall asleep.
It is night when Saul opens his eyes
again. He is lying on his stomach, his long body sprawling across the gravel
and his legs frozen in mid-stride position. A piece of gravel in the shape of a
sharp arrowhead stabs his trachea when he rolls over in his sleep. He wakes up
coughing and massaging his throat. When he slows his breathing and looks down
at his hands and body, he cannot see them. He looks around and sees the distant
lights of the city and a scattering of stars above. The gold, yellow, and white
bulbs of streetlamps and house lights look like bright drops of paint
splattering on slate. Saul's eyes adjust to the darkness and the shapes around
him are clearer. He stares at the black swells of fragrant vines, flowers, and
plants growing in the wilderness, but when he sees the narrow, rectangular
rails curving across the ground, he thinks of the dog.
When the image of the dog flashes
across his mind, it unleashes a flood of memories. He can still hear Robbie's
constant screaming and see the dog swallowing him whole. He can still see the
fire surrounding the dog's body, its enormous head, and yellow eyes. Anxiety
overwhelms him and, when he tries to stand, scrambles and slides in the gravel.
The stomach pain doubles him over when he straightens his back.
He stands like that, draping his right
arm over his chest, and biting his lower lip hoping to dull the pain. It hits
harder than before and, through the hysteria, Saul wonders if he is bleeding. Did the dog hurt me? There is swelling
on his right side, a few inches above his hips, but no bleeding wounds. Please stop hurting please stop hurting, I
need to get the fuck out of here! His quivering lips are muttering those
words while he stands there, doubling over, and rocking back and forth on his
heels.
His stomach pain does not stop, but
it does weaken, like a knife sinking three inches into his skin instead of six.
The waves of anxiety washing over him earlier recede, his breathing slows, and
he starts walking back to his car. Mounting exhaustion leaves him limp and
panting while he walks, but his mind is turning. It was all a dream, some crazy fucking fever dream. I came out here
looking for Robbie and I passed out. That's it, nothing more. I'll come back
out here and look tomorrow when I feel better.
The clock in the
car reads twelve-thirty and Saul sees no one when he drives home. He wonders if
he will drive back to the park tomorrow and look again. All that blood at that camp was no dream. Robbie might be dead by now.
I'll call the hospital when I get home, check with them. After today and
everything that comes with it, even passing out on the shoulder of the railroad
tracks, Saul wants to find Robbie again. He will talk until he runs out of
words, plead, flatter, bluster, and beg until Robbie agrees to get help for his
problems. At last, Saul will break down and confess he is dying. He will open
the door, wave Robbie into his world, and they will forgive death together so they
can live a little longer.
His apartment is small, overflowing
with books, and dishes pile in the sink. The faint smell of rotting food hangs
in the air and his shade-less lamps turn the nicotine-yellow walls gold. He
rinses a glass out, fills it with water from the faucet, and guzzles the
contents. When he sits the glass down on the counter, he hears a noise that
sounds like the billow of a steam engine. He freezes and hears a low, gurgling
moan outside that lasts for a five seconds.
He wonders if it is Robbie outside.
He wonders if someone is hurt or having car trouble outside. When he steps out
of the kitchen, he hears another moan, louder this time, harsher, a growl. His
heart is beating fast when he stands at his second-floor window overlooking the
street below.
Saul pulls back the thick brown
curtain, looks outside, and sees the black dog. It is standing on its haunches
under a street light. In the fluorescent glow, the dog's glistening black body
looks like it is writhing under a thin layer of fire. It is staring at Saul. He
is holding his open hand over his mouth, his eyes wide, gasping, and wishing
the dog away. No no no this can't be,
he thinks. He cannot form or latch onto another thought. The black dog is here.
It is coming to devour him, just like Robbie, just like Robbie's friend all those
years ago. The black dog is coming for him from the moment of his birth and the
hunt is over. When he sees the black dog spring from its position and gallop towards
his apartment, Saul starts screaming.
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