Walking through the park, my feet ached and I stopped next to a fountain and sat upon a splintery bench to rest them. The fountain beheld a tall, muscular, and veiny granite man, well-dressed in a marble toga. He stood majestic with his chin up and as he looked skyward, he pissed mightily on the children that frolicked below him. The children laughed and splashed about the pool of duck-tainted, but chlorine-sanitized urine at his feet, and played tag in his crystal stream. I looked around and wondered how no one but me could see the disgust of what I saw. Even so, I scooted myself down the bench, lest I share their watery joy.

I held in my hand an ice cream; dark chocolate and cold despite the afternoon heat. I’d purchased it minutes before from a cute girl pedaling a colorful cart down the leaf-shadowed paths of the park. As I licked my icy treat, and older gentlemen, opposite my perch, watched and smiled. I cleaned my treat as a cat preens would its paws, with my tongue caressing and lapping the folds of icy silk. I looked at him, winked, and mouthed a sexy “Meeeee-ow.”

He shuddered, looked away.

I lipped my chocolaty nipple, smiled.

Next to me, a pretty blonde mother with large, perky breasts opened her shirt and released a behemoth for the fussing baby in her lap to nurse. This action delighted the two pimple-faced boys across us. They leaned against an old oak, sweating under heavy leather jackets, and ogled her beneath greasy brows and greasier bangs. They spit one-liners of “Holy shit”, “Mother of god”, and “Damn, I wish I was that baby”.

I glanced back-and-forth between the two, my eyes watering from the tension and anxiousness of it all. While I felt nothing but shame for the boys, I felt only the utmost embarrassment for the mother, yet reserved a silliness feeling only for me. My trifecta of emotions wanted her to cover up, move, or give those boys a tongue-lashing, but my sensibility knew it was not up to me to relieve my discomfort of her, if she did not feel discomfort herself.

I thought more on the situation and soon realized it was not silliness I felt sitting there next to her, it was selfishness. I knew then that the silliness came from something deep inside my memories that scolded me that thus far my life had been inadequate. The selfishness though, it arose not from memories, but from some inhibited animal instinct that I’d kept tethered deep inside dark, mossy cockles of my soul. Left years in darkness, it lunged at the light, feeding on it, struggling to be free, but the rope held taught. The instinct snapped at me and nipped the fringe of my consciousness. In weakness I told myself it was safe, and I let it sniff my hand.

“See, I’m nice,” I said.

“You’re lacking,” it said, and I laughed. “You’re lacking, and it’s entirely the baby’s fault.”

I licked my ice cream, preening its soft folds with my tongue, and I knew the animal was right. It was the infant’s fault and I wholeheartedly blamed him. I mean, why should that little bastard get a whole gallon of milky goodness, while I settled for an ounce of frozen substitute melting in my hand?

“Dibs on the left,” I said. What was this? My mouth had betrayed me, and I spittled a chocolate mist.

The boys laughed and pointed. They smacked each other’s back and one grabbed his knees in exasperation of breath.

I smiled at the mother, my lips ringed in chocolate. Surely, I thought, I look the fool.

She eyed me as if I’d just asked to toss her baby to zoo lions.

And I, fearing my safety, scuttled away. I rushed through the park, kicking at the heroic squirrels and pine cones that dared try trip me.

Not far from the fountain, along the asphalt path, I passed a hotdog vendor. He wheeled his large aluminum cart over tree roots and acorn seeds, bumping and jostling his wieners against the cart’s reverberating metal thighs. He lacked his trademark cherry smile he used for greeting the nightly gaggles of hungry midnight debaucherists who salivated to nibble the browned and wrinkled skin of his girthy brawts. Instead he frowned, waving and clapping his hands at the flock of carrion insects that vied to sample his dewy meat for free. He’d have none of their business though, them with their empty pockets and cardboard signs, and he peppered his hands with their black-winged bodies.

“Begone,” he said.

I smiled as I approached. “I hear you man, those gnats drive me nuts too.”

He flipped me the bird, and I shied at his hostility. “I was talking to you perv,” he said. “Get the hell out of here before I call the cops.”

I shrugged and hurried along. If a finger from a wiener dealer was the worst thing to happen to me after my recent outburst, then I considered myself lucky. Understandably, I’d received the least of what I deserved.

[856]

Ferris pointed at the thin, shins-high wire strung between the wooden fence posts. “Pee on it,” he said.

I shook my head. He shrugged, and broke a leafy branch from a nearby Cottonwood. He poked it through the woven wire at the goats on the other side. They nibbled and pulled at the treat, and he inched it back in attempt to coax them closer to the electric wire.

“Neither me or those goats,” I said, “are stupid enough to let you get us electrocuted.” I pushed him, and he tipped back off his feet.

“I knew them goats weren’t,” he said, and picked himself up, “but I didn’t hold much favor in you.” He pulled the branch from the fence and tossed it on the ground as he walked away. I picked it up and heaved it to the goats; they bounced, hopped, and bleated their thanks. I followed Ferris to the picnic table where he’d sat next to my sister; the two of them spoke in low voices.

“…and that’s what I said, but he’s too scared—”

“It’s not fear,” I said, and interrupted him, “it’s the experience to know not to do something stupid twice.”

“I’m not scared,” Horrid said. “I’d do it.” Horrid, as in Buck-Toothed Horrid, is the name my older sister, Raymond Barf-Pickle, had given her.

I looked at Horrid and shook my head. “There is no way you are going to pee on that hot-wire,” I said.

“Uh-huh,” she said. She crossed her arms and furrowed her brow.

“Trust me Horrid, if you pee on that fence you’ll split in two.”

Ferris laughed, and Horrid hung her head.

“Listen,” I said, “You really want to see what it’s like? Hold the brave one’s hand, and have him pee on it.”

They scooted apart and Ferris rubbed his hands along his pants. “That’s disgusting,” he said. “We’re cousins.”

“I said hold your ‘hand’ stupid.”

I ran an arm across my forehead and flicked the sweat. Behind the picnic table was the snap-wall swimming pool my parents bought a year prior with inheritance money. “I’m hot,” I said. “You guys want to go swimming?”

Ferris pulled at the moisture in his pits. “Yeah it is. You want to hooky-bob the canal?”

Horrid shuddered. “There’s dead puppies in there,” she said.

“No, over there,” I said, and they turned and looked.

“Are you kidding?” Ferris said. He walked over and scooped out a handful of feathers, leaves, goose excrement, and dark-green algae. “I’d rather hooky-bob. At least the puppies won’t stick to my hair.”

“It’s not that bad,” I said. “It just needs a good cleaning because mom didn’t buy any turtle tablets last time. She figured she didn’t need to spend money on something we rarely use.”

The ‘turtle tablets’ were chlorine tablets to be used with a green piece of plastic molded in the shape of a turtle and supposed to keep the pool clean. The turtle held the chlorine tablet in its mesh womb and when dropped in the pool, the turtle acted as guardian against scum and bugs. Unfortunately, our turtle was a coward and the scum and bugs always won. The pool man convinced dad it was easy maintenance because he wouldn’t have to mix the pool chemicals himself, but after the first thirty days in the sun and the water still turned green, dad was sure the salesman was full of crap. On boring days, we’d shoot BBs at the turtle, or if out of brass ammo, we’d throw rocks.

“We could clean it now,” I said. “Dump it out. Refill it. It’s better than playing out front in the sprinklers and dirt.”

“Or swimming with dead puppies,” said Horrid. She looked at Ferris, and he faked a shiver.

“The fresh water will be cold,” he said.

“That’s better than hot,” I said. I stood. “I’m getting my shorts on.”

He shrugged, and flicked the handful of crap at me. “You’re seriously going to wade in that?”

“You’re right, we’ll need shoes,” I said, and walked to the pool.

“Why?” he said.

“BBs and rocks,” I said.

“Oh, right…wait, I never said I was getting in.”

“I know it’s gross,” I said, “but it’s easier to get in and dump the water out, than reach in from the outside.”

“Can’t we just pull the plug?”

“It doesn’t have one. You scoop out the water, then when it’s low enough, you push down the sides, and—whoosh!—drain it.” I made a wave motion with my hands, and peeked over the edge. “There’s not a lot of scum. We can skim it off and then bail the water. This’ll be easy-cheesy.” I looked at Horrid. “Run inside and grab that metal strainer from the kitchen.”

“Mom said she didn’t want to see us using that again,” she said.

“Then don’t tell her.”

†††††

We skimmed the top layer of scum from the pool. Horrid used the strainer, Ferris his hands, and I circled the pool and made sure they didn’t miss any.

Horrid laughed at two water bugs mating under the surface. “Look,” she said. “He’s getting a piggy-back ride and they have fart bubbles on their butts.”

“That’s for air,” I said. I took the strainer and flicked the beetles onto the grass. The beetles didn’t break during, or after their flight, and stayed mounted even as they bounced across the dusty, weed-pocked lawn.

“Them are two horny bugs,” Ferris said, and I nodded.

“They have horns?” Horrid said. She knelt and studied the bugs. “Where are their horns?”

“Forget it,” I said. I grabbed a bucket, and hopped into the pool. “Let’s hurry and get this…” I paused because Ferris was being a wuss. “Come on Ferris; grab the big bucket would you?”

He sighed and dropped the Mason jar, then grabbed a five-gallon aluminum milk bucket. “Why do you get the half-bucket?” he said. He tip-toed down the ladder into the sternum-deep water.

“You’re bigger,” I said.

Even after we’d skimmed the scum, Horrid was reluctant to enter the pool. She said the remaining beetles scared her, so Ferris and I rounded them up with the strainer and tossed them out. Once satisfied that the water was bug-free, Horrid sunk into the water with us. It topped her clavicles and splashed against her chin, which she kept tipped up to keep the water away from her mouth. Unfortunately, too much movement from either Ferris or me and the water splashed her lips anyway.

Because Ferris was bigger than I, according to my observations he was also less efficient. Where I was quick and agile, he was slow and clumsy, and for every bucket of water he tossed out, I tossed out three. He took notice of my speed, and, obviously impressed, commented on it.

“At least fill the half-bucket half-way,” he said. “For every full one of mine, you toss three nearly empty ones.”

“I prefer, slightly full,” I said. “Besides, I move quite fast with this marvel of ingenuity.” I scooped a Daddy Long-legs spider from the water, but dropped the strainer when the spider clung to my thumb like flotsam. I flicked my wrist and the spider impacted Horrid’s shoulder and stuck there like a spindly mole. Ferris’s eyes grew wide and I gave him the shush signal. He smiled and scooped a bucket of water-logged feathers over the side.

Ferris paused and stared at the fence. “Do you think your dad’ll be mad about all the water around his posts?”

I looked where he pointed; the water had eaten gulches and ravines around the posts. A particularly clever goat tapped one post with its hoof, rocking the post back and forth in its foundation. This was all bad news when your dad was a fence fanatic. Messing with dad’s prized fences was like pissing on Minos in Hell, while laughing about it from a cliff top in Purgatory; sooner or later he’s going to figure out it’s not rain.

“We’ll throw some fresh dirt around it when we’re done,” I said. “He won’t notice. Hey…what do you think would happen if we threw water on that electric fence from here?”

Ferris studied the wire. “Don’t know, but I’m willing to find out. Toss some water on it.”

“Why me?” I said. Horrid swam up and I moved lest the spider make the leap from her shoulder to my bony chest.

“It was your idea,” Ferris said.

“Yeah, it was my idea for you to do it.”

“I’m not doing it,” he said.

“Your ‘willing to find out,’ sounded like you were volunteering,” I said, and Horrid nodded. “See? She agrees. Toss the water.”

Ferris looked at the wire, then the water, then the wire, and then the water. “Ok, I think it’ll be fine,” he said. “It’s a good three feet from us and besides, I’ll be holding this plastic bucket. Electricity doesn’t go through plastic.”

“I didn’t know that,” I said.

“I know a lot of useful things because I read more than you. Such as, I know plastic conducts electricity…” He scooped a bucketful of water and leaned over the edge. “…and that means it blocks it. Should I throw it straight, or arc it up?”

“Arc it,” Horrid said, and clapped her hands.

Ferris pulled the bucket back. “Straight it is,” he said, and thrust the bucket from his mid-section. He pulled back as his arms reached full extension, and the water speared toward the wire. We watched in silence as it missiled over the dry, cracked earth, and completed a circuit with the hot-wire.

Horrid reacted first; partly due to her size and ability to conduct electricity through her tiny frame, and partly because she had reached up and touched the stream as it left the bucket. She jiggled and jolted. Her teeth snapped, and her hair greyed at the temples. The spider shot off her shoulder in a puff of smoke and it screamed as it skipped across the water in a contorted heap of legs.

Ferris gasped and crushed the bucket between his hands. He let loose a cry that frightened ducks from the nearby pond, and he quickly spelled out ‘b-o-l-o-g-n-a’ as he collapsed on the pool wall. Later he’d refuse to admit that he’d peed in the pool when his muscles contracted. “That’s the smell of algae when an electrical charge is passed through it in a liquid environment,” he’d said. “Uncanny, but it really does smell like urine.”

“I just thought it was strange how it smelled like poop once it dried,” I’d said.

“Oh yeah,” he’d said, “it does that too, but it’s rare.”

I was the last to react. Possibly because at a young age I was given the gift of prophecy, but also quite possibly, because I was halfway up the ladder and nearly out of the water once I realized that fool was going to electrocute us all.

I don’t know what it was about that ladder, but I became quite attached to it and I couldn’t release my grip from its metal handle for a good five minutes. I spit taste buds from my tongue and my teeth smoldered like charcoal briquettes, and oddly enough, the piss-scented algae seemed to have attached itself to my shorts as well. After I got some feeling in my legs, and my skin regained its color, I walked down the ladder towards Horrid who floated stomach up. I smacked my fist into her chest and restarted her heart, then I walked to Ferris and did the same to his back, but I struck him purely out of spite. Horrid climbed from the pool and shambled towards the house, dragging her left leg behind her. Saliva streamed from her mouth, and she choked out “mom” in black smoke rings that rose from her mouth and dissipated in her bangs.

Ferris stood up, and I said, “What happened?”

He looked at me, his jaw worked as if he chewed cud, and he spit feathers and algae. “Thunderstorm must of swept in real quick-like,” he said, and picked shards of bucket from the bleeding wounds in his palms. “Do you realize the odds of that hitting this pool?”

“What about the hot-wire?” I said.

“Right,” he said, and scratched his head. “When did we do that exactly?” He dipped his hands and ran the water through his hair, which immediately stood back up. “I lost track of time,” he said. “Which way is east?”

“Why?” I said.

“It’s dark. I can’t tell if it’s morning, or late afternoon. Maybe it’s those damn cataracts.”

“It’s afternoon,” mom said, “and if this is what’s left of my strainer, you’re two are in it deep.” She stood next to the pool, but neither of us had heard her approach, nor had we seen her pull the strainer from the house where the electricity had speared it into the siding minutes before.

“That’s not your strainer,” I said, and waved my hand like a Jedi.

“Wrong answer,” she replied. “Out of the pool, now.” She spat “now” as if it leaked acid, and her spittle burned when it impacted my eyes.

I tugged Ferris’ arm. “C’mon,” I said. “We have to get out.”

“Why?” he said. He looked around and then back at me. “Is it too early?”

“No it’s too late,” I said. “Way late. We’ve released the Kraken, and she’s pissed about her kitchen wares.”

[2246]

{…Continued}

He furrowed his brow, unsure of what that meant, and wasn’t sure he was following her logic, or her time-line. Being off one, like she was, threw the whole conversation off kilter.

She noticed his confusion, and continued, “The college kid. He was twenty, I was twenty-eight. Don’t judge. I think he liked older girls.”

He wasn’t judging, he thought she was younger than twenty-eight now. This surprised him, as she was closer to his age than he thought.

“We’d dated a while. I thought it was a passing fancy. Something to get his rocks off, but, you know, I still liked the kid. Liked him a lot actually, but even when he asked to marry me, I couldn’t accept. I was that night, you know, the proposal. I guess you could say we’d just finished the sympathy sex for my declination of his want, when you parted the blinds.”

He realized what she was talking about, and said, “That was two.”

“Ok, two,” she said, and propped up on her elbows. “I knew it had to be an early one, as I said, you were real sloppy. Thing is, I was there that night. I see you thinking, and no, I was there, as in there.” She spit the word as if it burned. “I was in the closet putting on a negligee when you burst in. I saw you through the crack in the door. You’d of seen me had you been more observant. Good for me, because it gave me time to kill the lights. I thought of screaming, but somehow I remembered it was a holiday weekend and most kids had gone home. The dorm was pretty much dead at that time. Maybe, one or two other couples, and a single or two, but it was early in the night, and I really think we were the only ones on that particular wing.

“If I’d of screamed, you’d have killed me too. That’s why I didn’t. I watched it all though. I watched him cower back in fear, but then fight you. I’m amazed he didn’t bruise from the wrestling you two did, but you got that chemical rag over his face and knocked him out right quick after that. Must have been a ton of that stuff on there, I could smell it in the closet.

“Thing is, I sat in that closet, smelling that dairy smell, and I watched you, and it scared me. When you hung him up, I thought it was fake, or a joke maybe, but it wasn’t. You put him up there, and slipped the noose around his neck. Then you released him; that’s what scared me most, you letting him go, his weight snapping against the rope, and the jolt jerking him awake. I’d never seen a person fight for their life before, but that way he fought and kicked at you was valiant. But you? You were heartless, scary heartless. You didn’t flinch. You didn’t move back. You stayed right there and stared. Then you patted him on the hip, stuffed that piece of paper into his belt, and walked away.

{To be Continued…}

[527]

{…Continued}

She twirled her hair, and bit at the ends of the longer strands of the braid. She looked at the white walls with the brown trim, and wondered if the room could be any more plain. He stood next to an ugly chair. It was wooden, with the same pattern as the duvet, but covered in a thick clear plastic for its protection.

She wished he sit down, hovering over her like this bothered her. It made her feel as if he thought he were more important, or stronger than her. Thing is, if he truly was either of those, then they both wouldn’t be here now, like this. He’d certainly be unknown, theoretically, and she’d certainly be dead.

He liked the braids she’d put in her hair; they reminded him of cinnamon twists. Though he didn’t want to admit it, the way she reclined on the bed and nibbled the braids and twirled them on her finger aroused him. He’d like to say that he was far too angry from the last night’s business to copulate here and now, but that’d be a lie. Just as he’d like to say that he shouldn’t of slept with her last night, hours ago, when he was more angry than he was human, but that too would be a lie. He liked how the animal took over last night, because the animal liked the sex angry too. One thing he would admit, should he be asked, was that the angrier he was, the better the sex turned out to be, and last night turned out fantastic. Still, he wasn’t about to give into the animal again, not when he was close to getting some answers.

“Get on with it,” he said.

He plopped into a chair, and his weight caused air to explode out from the cushion underneath him.

She turned over on her stomach and dangled her arms off the side of the bed. She looked up at him, and batted her lashes. Knock that shit off, he thought, but he liked it nonetheless, and kept his mouth shut.

“I’ve followed you for a while,” she said. She figured starting with the most shocking thing she could think of would be best, and then work back from that. The problem was, and she had no idea how to solve it, what would be the biggest shock to him? “My guess is that I’ve been following you since victim number four. The Emo-girl with the Mohawk haircut, and lots of piercings.”

He nodded, and said, “Yeah, fourth.” But it was a lie. Emo-girl, Susanna, was number five. This meant she had missed one. That was good, but still, he was nervous. His hands shook, and he sat on them to steady the shaking.

“Ok, fourth then, that’s what I thought. Before that one, before now even, I wasn’t real sure she was number four, or if I had missed one or two. I’m glad I was right, that I did know about that one like I did. That means the first one was really your first, and as sloppy as it was, there is no reason it couldn’t be. You didn’t even clear the room.”


{To be Continued…}

[538]

{…Continued}

“She’s watching,” said the blackbird. It had its head tilted to the side, and he couldn’t tell if the damn thing was watching her, or listening for him to take a swat at the damn thing. It had crossed his mind, to just reach out, grab that bird, and throttle the hell out that feathered fiend. He imagined choking it, and taunting it. He’d urge the smart ass to sprout some of its weedy comments whilst turning blue.

Don’tcha turn my blackbird blue.

He wondered if a bird truly turned blue under its rachis and barbules when choked, and the idea of doing such broke his thoughts, and he turned and glanced at the window. She stood there; curtains parted as a playmate would, and stared at him in the car. “Time to go,” he said, and unbuckled his seat belt.

“I think I’ll stay,” said the blackbird.

“No, you’re coming to. You’ve a part in this, and I’m aiming to find out just what that is. Besides, it’s time I found a lot of things out.”

“Such as.”

“Such as everything.”

*****

She closed the curtain when she saw him open the car door. Weights sewn into the bottom corners made the curtains clack against the wall. “I think he’s coming back in,” she said. The television station flashed scenes of Hitchcock’s Vertigo across the white-washed walls of the room. She turned off the television set, and looked at the roach with a sad expression on her face. “Wanted to watch that,” she said, and walked over and sat on the chair she’d sat on hours before. “Ready or not,” she said.

He knocked—unsure of why he would do so when it was his room to start with—and opened the door. He walked through, stepping lightly over the threshold and into the main bedroom. She sat on the bed, legs crossed, and her fingers tapped the duvet cover.

“Loo-cee, yous got sum splainin’ to do,” said the blackbird, from the nightstand on the window side of the bed.

“Shut up,” he said.

She blinked as if startled.

“Not you,” he said. He began to say, “the bird”, but changed his mind, and said, “Never mind.”

She shifted on the bed. “I’m glad you came back.”

He shrugged, and rolled his teeth behind his gums. “I’m not sure yet myself. I nearly stayed where I was at, but after hearing you the past day, or so, I knew I’d probably fucked something up again.” She shook her head. “Yeah, I swear to much, I know. Don’t do it on purpose, it just slips out now and then. More now, than then, it seems.”

“Listen—”

“No, stop there. Tell me everything. From the start, I want to hear it all. Not excuses. Not alibis. Just what you know and why you know it.”

She leaned back; propped herself up on two brown pillows, laced in yellow flowers. “You’re going to need a seat,” she said. “Because this is a long story.”

 

{To be Continued…}

[503]

{…Continued}

The bird peeked from behind the curtain, smiled in that crazy way birds do. It reminded her of the crows on Dumbo, and she expected it to spout whimsical nonsense, but it didn’t. She held out her hand to the bird, but it ignored that and lit upon the nightstand instead.

“Been a while,” she said.

The bird cocked its head, and said, “Been a while.”

“Knock it off,” she said.

“Knock it off,” the bird repeated.

“Copy me again, and I’ll show your cockroach friend what it’s like to live up inside your butt.”

“What did I do?” The cockroach crawled out from beneath the covers of the bed, and it looked up at her. Its face showed a panged reaction, but she knew it was bunk.

“Guilt by association,” she said. “Where have you been?”

“For us to know, and you—”

“Shut the hell up,” she said, interrupting the blackbird. “Last time. I swear to God, last time.”

The blackbird chirped, then dropped from the bed and hopped to the window. It chirped again, then disappeared behind the curtain. She turned to the cockroach, “Now, tell me, where did he go?”

*****

He stopped the car outside the parking lot, and looked at the window. Light flashed between the curtain, and for a moment he caught sight of her standing there in what he thought was her nakedness, but she pulled the curtains closed too quickly for him to be certain.

“Still too thin for my tastes,” he said, and pulled the car into a parking spot next to a large, leafless oak. He hadn’t heard from the insect or its feathered friend in quite some time, and he started to suspect that he had imagined it all, but the cockroach peeked up from between the seats, and said, “Wait here,” then it disappeared.

He waited, and after a couple of minutes, he heard a sound in the trunk. “Hello bird.”

“Good day mate!” the bird replied, from the trunk; it fluttered and pecked at the trunk’s metal wall.

“Come up front would you please,” he said, and the bird hopped onto the seatback next to his shoulder. “We’re going to have us a chat.”

The blackbird nodded and bobbed, and said, “Yep, yep.”

*****

She put down her hand palm up, but the cockroach circumvented it, and crawled up close to her bent knee instead.

She thought of smashing the thing, getting it away from her forever, but deep down, she didn’t think that it would actually work. Its silence these past few hours had been a blessing, but now that it reappeared, she had questions for it. Starting with, “The blackbird, it’s gone?”

“Yes,” said the roach.

“Good,” she said. She stood and walked to the window. She parted the curtains, and looked out through the ice-tinted glass. She saw the car, and she saw him in it. He sat behind the wheel, his head turned to the right, and he seemed to be talking to himself, or someone that she couldn’t see.

{To be Continued…}

[506]

{…Continued}

He resisted at first, but when she slid her hand down his pants, he gave up fighting, and gave into her advances. He jumped when she called out, and her less-than-mild choice of words took him aback, and made concentration, or even simple enjoyment, difficult.

Mouth of a sailor, he thought. He’d thought he’d heard the blackbird give a whistle and giggle, but he passed it off as nerves, and concentrated more on ignoring her low-pitched cries of ‘oh god’, ‘oh shit’, ‘yes’, and other colorful anecdotes she let slip.

She awoke hours later, and he was gone.

It was dark outside, and a sliver of moonlight sliced the curtains in two, illuminated the carpet at the end of the bed. She pulled the bed covers up around her neck, and rolled over, turned on the bedside lamp. She blinked at the brightness, and held her hand at her brow, as if blocking the sun from her sensitive eyes.

She called out to him, but he did not answer, so she draped her legs over the side of the bed, and stood up; the covers fell about her feet, and pushed air that rushed up and spread the soft linen curtains open, exposed her nakedness to the rain-soaked parking lot outside.

She blushed, and quickly pulled the curtains closed. She searched for her clothing, and found her t-shirt stuffed between the nightstand and the wall. She pulled the shirt over her head, and stepped a foot into one of the holes in her panties, and slid them out from under the bed.

She walked towards the bathroom, pulling her panties up over her hips. She turned on the light; all of his toiletries were missing.

“Son of a biscuit,” she said, and slammed her fist against the bathroom light switch. The lights dimmed slowly, like a low-burning candle.

She was worried, but not because he was gone, but because she was stuck there; possibly with the bill. She opened all of the drawers in the room, and checked under the bed, in the closet, and behind the doors, but nothing of his was left in the room. It was as if he’d never been there at all. She wondered how she could have slept through him packing everything up and walking out, but after several minutes of worry, she gave up wondering and sat down on the end of the bed.

She turned and stared at the window. She could have sworn she’d heard someone giggling.

She turned on the television, and tuned it to a classic movie station that claimed a marathon of Hitchcock movies were showing all night long. She laid back on the bed, propped her head on a pillow, and watched Jimmy Stewart wrestle mentally with two students in Rope. She sighed; she’d seen the movie several times in her life, and although she like it, thought it was one of his best, she was more in a The Man Who Knew Too Much type of mood.

She heard the giggle again, but did not turn. Instead, she muted the television, and said, “I know you’re there blackbird. Come out and stop messing with me.”

{To be Continued…}

[529]

 

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