SUCCUMBING TO GRAVITY
Richard Farnsworth
Succumbing to Gravity
Copyright © 2010 Richard Farnsworth
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be used or reproduced by any means, graphic, electronic, or mechanical, including photocopying, recording,
taping or by any information storage retrieval system without the written permission of the publisher except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles and reviews.
This is a work of fiction. All of the characters, names, incidents, organizations, and dialogue in this novel are either the products of the author’s imagination or
are used fictitiously. Reliquary Press books may be ordered through booksellers or by contacting:
Reliquary Press
Because of the dynamic nature of the Internet, any Web addresses or links contained in this book may have changed since publication and may no longer be valid. The views expressed in this work are solely those of the author and do not
necessarily reflect the views of the publisher, and the publisher hereby disclaims any responsibility for them.
01.
A long, thin line of clouds stretched out across the azure sky all the way to the western horizon. I descended through the cool air above the Steppe and a teasing updraft bumped from my left. I dipped my wing to catch the uplifting thermal, but it dissipated before I wheeled into the column. With two strong beats of my golden wings I bought thirty feet of altitude. Below me and to the right a bronze-colored eagle hung in a lazy upward spiral on a rising column of heated air. I stretched my left wing up and out and traced my own leisurely arc through the sky and down into his elevator. I could see the apprehensive tension in the raptor as we circled at opposite sides of the column.
“No fear, brother,” I called to him. He winged over and away; I slipped sideways and found that snaky, tightly wound, central core of air that shot me upward.
With arms stretched out beneath my wings I flexed my fingers. I arched my back, tensed my legs and splayed out my toes. I tightened the long flat muscles along the cords of my wings. My flaxen primary feathers stood out like individual fingers beneath the primary coverts of dark russet, flecked with black and bronze variegations.
I spiraled upward and held as much of the air around me as I could. Over the top, the column was gone and I soared. All the world was beneath me, all of heaven above.
A cloud front came up behind me and a sudden down draft caught me unawares. I dropped a few hundred feet and left my stomach above. Nausea took its place. Eight long beating sweeps of my wings and I regained half the altitude I’d lost. The air cooled suddenly and tight little patches of gooseflesh puckered on my bare skin.
The earth pulled at me. I beat my great wings again, not so easy now to stay aloft. I raced ahead but still the clouds overtook me, condensed and squeezed out a sheet of rain. Looking up as the drops fell disoriented me.
I beat harder, but I could feel the air settling around me in a down draft. Panic welled up with the bile in my throat. The dark, wet ground raced up to meet me. A whimper escaped as I gave in to gravity’s unforgiving embrace.
Hard, wet asphalt pressed into my face. The impact wasn’t as hard as I thought it would be. I reached up to brace against the ground and saw the syringe still hanging from my arm. The stainless steel needle was pointing to a spidery blue vein. I let my arm sink back down, and watched the rain dimple the inky puddle near my face.
I always relived that flight when I was lit. I flexed my atrophied flight muscles to feel the wing stumps quiver. So many, many things I had lost. The phantom pain along the missing cords of my wings made me wince. I was freezing, but I couldn’t tell if it was the soaked clothing or the cold flashes that I got when I came down.
“Greg? There you are.”
I tried to focus on the voice and brushed the needle from my arm.
“Oh Greg, you know you shouldn’t shoot up in the open like this.” That was Sarah’s voice in the dark, my judgmental little runaway. Her smack habit wasn’t as bad as mine so she felt comfortable lecturing me. Easy to do when she hadn’t fallen as far as I had.
“I wasn’t in the open, I was behind a dumpster,” I slurred. I was sprawled in the center of the alley, with the dumpster behind me.
“Someone could do something to you.” Her genuine concern was both irritating and comforting.
But what could they do to me that hadn’t already been done?
She grabbed my arm to help me sit up. I batted at her. It was easier to just stay where I was and to lay there in the filth and the muck. The rain pelting down on me.
“Come on Greg, up and at ‘em. You’ll get pneumonia if you lay out here in the street.” She pulled me to a sitting position and I leaned against the dumpster. The streetlamp shed a little light into the alley and I could make out her profile kneeling beside me. She produced a crusty towel from somewhere and dried my face.
“I was flying.” I closed my eyes and rested my head on her shoulder.
“Sometimes I feel like I’m flying too. But it’s just the drugs, Greg.”
She didn’t understand what I meant and it would take too long to explain.
“Let’s get you some coffee, I got someone I want you to read.” She stood and walked behind the dumpster.
I rested my head back against the smooth, cold metal and let the drops run down my face. It was so real this time. So real. My tears were lost in the rain.
Sarah came back around with my threadbare overcoat. I guess I’d left it there before I launched. She shook it out and draped it over my shoulders as I leaned forward. Pressing her fingers to my temples, she pulled my head forward and touched her lips to my forehead.
“It’ll be okay.” No. No, it would never be okay. “Listen, I’m no good for a reading right now,” I said. One of my residual gifts; if I concentrated I could see a mortal’s soul. As the soul rested slightly out of phase with the physical world I could often see hints of past events, sometimes a bit of the future. Philosophers or theologians could debate how it worked, but the trick usually earned me enough to score some junk.
“She’s scared and she can pay.”
That bit of information reached through the haze. “How much?”
“Dinner for both of us and fifty bucks too, I bet.” “Is dinner your booking fee?” She smiled. I couldn’t see it in the dark, but I knew she wore that little gapped-tooth grin. She helped me to my feet and we balanced awkwardly for a minute as I dry heaved. She reached up and wiped my mouth and chin before we started off. Though little in stature her soul was bigger than any two people.
I remembered the first part and said, “Scared of what?”
She didn’t say. Didn’t have to, I could feel it. Alone with the monsters in the dark, that’s what everyone’s afraid of.
I stumbled beside her with that kicking feeling in my left leg. She helped to support me and guide me as I shook the cobwebs out. Soon I’d be good for a few hours, maybe through until morning.
“How’d you know where I was?”
“Jimenez said she saw you get a score from Beenie when she was working sixty-third. I just checked every alley from Beenie’s spot to the apartment until I found you.” She sounded pretty proud of herself. The apartment to which she referred was a room we shared in what aspired to be a slum. Often no running water or electric, but it was dry.
We stopped a few times so that I could dry heave some more. Slow going, weaving between the deeper puddles. This wasn’t at all like flying. She shepherded me to a late night café. It was the nasty kind of place people like us could be served. I saw my reflection in the big plate glass window coming up. I had been radiant once. Now my straw-colored hair hung greasy and limp, framing those high angelic cheekbones that used to drive the women wild. Oh, what a different story my reflection told now. Gaunt and haunted, I looked like every other burnout in the city. Sarah looked a little better, but the dark eye make-up made her look more cheap than Gothy. What a pair we made.
The smell of stale grease greeted us inside and no heads turned when the little bell above the door announced our arrival.
The woman I’d come to meet was sitting alone, pretty and young, swathed in a heavy coat. We sat opposite her on the cracked vinyl seat of the booth, and she looked at Sarah, and then furtively at me. She complained about how long she had waited and Sarah made an excuse. Her soul was old and I saw a line from a poem I’d once read in her, something about wandering in eternal fear of falling into the indefinite. She wouldn’t make eye contact and didn’t believe that I could really read her so I told her that.
“Is that all your magic?” she asked, a little flash in her chocolate brown eyes. A corresponding glint of light caught as she breathed, just above the top button of her blouse. A small gold cross on a chain rested at the little dip in the smooth flesh where the throat tucked in behind the collarbones.
“No, that’s the surface stuff. Tell me what you want and we’ll see if I can reveal your innermost.”
Sarah’s bony elbow nudged me. “Be nice.” “How nice?” She didn’t answer. She just looked at the pretty young woman and said, “This is Greg. Like I told you before, he’s the guy that can tell if there really is anything funny going on with your dreams. Greg, this is Maria.”
“He looks like a junkie.”
I half-shrugged. I suppose my appearance was an occupational hazard.
“Is that how you can see into the Santeria? Because you’re on the stuff?”
“He’s okay now,” Sarah said. Her tone was between placating and matter-of-fact, she didn’t want to jeopardize the deal.
“How long you been using?” She had a Latin accent. Maybe Puerto Rican, I couldn’t tell.
“Heroin?”
“Yeah.” Her hostility had an undercurrent of sadness. Maybe it was the wisps of loss I saw in her soul.
“On and off since 1890, I think. Mostly on.”
The young woman tucked a wayward strand of black hair behind an ear and gave a disbelieving cluck with her tongue.
“Like I said, Greg used to be an angel,” Sarah whispered proudly.
Maria raised an eyebrow. She didn’t believe.
“It’s true, he still grows little feathers where his wings used to be.”
“What happened? You get demoted?” The cross flashed as Maria tucked her elbows close to her sides, like a boxer ready to deflect the body blows. She looked into my eyes then. Such sadness.
“Judged and found wanting, with ninety-eight of my closest friends. Believe me sister, that was a really bad day.”
The waitress came over to take our order. I saw the huddled tangles of unfulfilled dreams and fifty or so hard years there as she set the coffee pot on the table lip. She laughed as she took my order and with nicotine-yellowed nails biting into the pencil stub, she scratched it onto the notepad. She called me ‘Hon’, took Sarah’s order and poured out the old smelling coffee before she moved on. I held the mug against my face to warm my cheek and took a sip. It was acrid but good enough that it made my stomach growl.
“The reading is fifty bucks on top of the meal, like we talked about,” Sarah interrupted. “Remember how he helped your friend, Jessica? With her dreams? So he can do the same for you. Right”
I didn’t remember a Jessica. I usually didn’t remember any of them after I got a score though. Except Sarah. I couldn’t get her out of my head after that first time I read her. Now she was my booking agent, and my best friend. She and Milton, who Sarah had brought into my life. Or was it the other way around?
Maria nodded and pulled a billfold out of her thick wool coat. She took out three dog-eared bills and rested them at the midpoint of the grime-covered table. Such a trusting soul.
I laid both my hands out, palms up. The sleeve of my overcoat pulled back to reveal blue veins, stark against my pale skin. The veins traced up and disappeared into the elaborate tattooing on my forearms. Marks that weren’t meant for human eyes, but were just too much trouble to keep covered.
Maria glanced down and the look she gave made me feel she thought them dirty. She gently rested her two hands on top of mine. They were small. I ran my thumbs over the backs and she flinched a little, but didn’t pull away. Hard. Sinewy. She took care to use lotions and the skin was supple. In another life maybe they’d be the hands of a wool sorter. Her dark eyes locked onto mine and I could see.
I closed my eyes quickly at the jolt of it. I tasted copper and suppressed a shudder. There was a hint of familiarity there in that strong soul. It was an old soul indeed, a soul that could really make a difference. The kind of soul a nether-worlder could really sink his teeth into. She had paid for a show and that’s what I owed her. A show, not the proclamation of her damnation that I saw.
“You live with your Mother. Also Maria. You work as a seamstress on the lower east side. Three bus stops from home.”
I felt her nod encouragement, but she was not convinced.
“You lost jewelry. A brooch. It belonged to your Grandmother. You had left it on the nightstand and it fell between the headboard and the mattress.”
She didn’t believe that either, but if she had time I knew she would check.
“Your little sister has passed on. Three years now. There is no fault there for you. Sometimes the little ones are just called home early.”
She almost succeeded in pulling her hands away. I opened my eyes and could see it. She arched a raven black eyebrow. She didn’t know what I saw.
The waitress came with our order. Sarah asked for extra crackers with her soup. I had a double stack of pancakes. I noted the ghost of a jagged white line there on the left wrist as I disengaged my hands from Maria’s and cut into my stack.
“Ask him,” Sarah said.
Don’t ask if you don’t really want to know. Most people don’t really want their worst fears confirmed. They just want a pat on the hand so that they can continue with their delusions that every thing will be all right.
Maria steeled herself and said, “There’s this man, I see.”
“There are many men, Maria. Billions in fact. The earth teems with them like locusts.”
Sarah nudged me again harder.
“There’s this man I see in my dreams. Not really a man, I don’t see him so well. Mostly the eyes. It’s not good though, you know?”
Sarah nodded encouragement for me. I speared a syrupsoaked wedge of pancakes. I love pancakes. Could eat them at every meal.
“It’s a bad thing. Sometimes I even think that I see him standing behind me in reflections, but when I turn he is not there.”
I picked a piece of eggshell from my tongue, wondering how that got in my food. Back to business. “Reflections?” I asked.
“Yes, like in the mirror, a window or sometimes on the side of glass of water. He is there watching, behind me, and when I turn to see him he is not there. This man, he makes me worry.”
She should. There is nothing good in this. In fact, within the next three hours or so, the harbinger for this man will crack her open like a nut and extract the sweet meat of her soul. But what could I do about that? I only felt like a hero when I was lit and now I was almost down.
She described the wicked strangeness of her dreams that I knew too well. Then she asked me, “Do you see what I should do?” I had indeed misread the sadness in her eyes, as it was despair.
“If you see this man, leave him alone. Get some salt on the way home. When you turn in tonight, pull your bed from the wall and pour the salt in a thick circle around it. That should keep the dreams away. Also, I’m told burning a fish will work, but I haven’t tried it.”
“Is that all?”
I tilted the plate, scooped up the extra syrup with an eggyolk stained spoon and said, “Well, you’ll find the brooch.”
“I mean is there anything else I can do?” “Are you Catholic?” “No, I’m a Baptist.” “A Puerto Rican Baptist?”
“I’m Dominican. Why do you ask if I’m Catholic?”
“I was going to suggest confession and a candle to the Holy Mother with the salt, but I don’t know what Baptists do. I’m old-fashioned religion.” “We pray to our Lord and Savior.” Praying. Like that ever did any good. “Do that then.” I had nothing else for her and after a bit she left unsatisfied, but our stomachs were full. When we were alone I got a Styrofoam cup for the rest of my lukewarm coffee while Sarah gathered up the bills and stuffed them into her coat pocket.
The rain was over but the streets were covered in thin puddles. The reflection of lights on the floor of the canyon-like street gave the night a subterranean feel. Sarah stopped beside a homeless man wrapped in garbage bags lying on the sidewalk and dumped her extra cracker packets into his lap.
I stepped over his outstretched leg and said, “Someday that Good Samaritan thing is gonna bite you in the ass, sweetness.” The small smile she gave me made me feel even better than the full stomach. After a few paces she reached out and took my hand in hers. We interlaced fingers and I pulled her hand up to brush my lips against the back of her fingers, the nails all chewed and covered in chipped black polish.
She asked, “What did you really see, Greg?”
Maybe it was the coming down, or the positive vibe I was feeling, but I still shouldn’t have told her. In the three years we’d been together I had always told her the truth. I didn’t want to lie to her now, so I described the highlights of my vision.
She didn’t say anything at first. After the weighted pause she asked, “Why would they come for her?”
“I don’t know. She’s special, the fact she dreams of them like she does tells you she’s got serious mojo. Funny they come in the flesh though. That’s so old-school for them.”
“You can’t just leave her to that, Greg.” Her voice caught a little, so she cleared her throat and said, “You need to help.”
“I did help.” “The salt? Will that really do anything?” “Hell no. For the dreams yeah, but not if one comes in the flesh. Maybe slow them down and give her time to pray. Perhaps the big guy will help.”
She pulled her hand from mine and stopped walking to give me that look of hers. When I stopped and turned back she said, “Greg, think of what you used to be.”
I shrugged. “Sorry, my hero days were over long ago.”
“You can do something. I know you can. You have it in you to do great things.”
I just shook my head and gave a little shrug. The look she gave me broke my heart, but I’d gotten used to letting people down. She turned from me and ran into the cavernous night.
I called after her to wait. To come back. I even threw my cup in frustration, but she didn’t stop. The rain picked up to a misty drizzle now as I turned back the other way and started home.
The night was at its darkest. And I was alone again. A city of millions and I was alone. But then, I had been alone for a long time. Probably for the best, as the lives I touched never seemed to be better after, than before. The full stomach was a nice change so I focused on that. It would have been better without the ache in my joints so I started to plan my next narcotics offense while pretending not to think about Sarah.
Three blocks down from the café, I stepped off the curb and noticed something small near the gutter. I reached down to pick up a dead sparrow. I sat down on the curb with my legs over the rush of gutter water and cradled the little corpse in my left hand. With my right I teased out the little wing.
“No flying for you either, little brother.”
I stretched out both the little wings and gently rested the bird on the stream of water and watched it not quite fly away. With the darkness the water was invisible but for snatches of reflected light. And the broken bird weaved first left then right on a glittering silver path through the detritus of the gutter.
I pondered that after I got my bearings and started back toward the pad. The dead bird pushed along involuntarily as if by an invisible hand, on his way to an appointment with a sewer grate. It was too cold to philosophize and I was wet and just wanted to get back home and crash.
02.
A working girl sheltered in the alcove that led into my building. Her soul was twisted and forlorn gray, shot through with little crimson rivulets of spite, all stuffed in an overweight body in fishnets and too much makeup. She’d turned at least two tricks already and her pupils were little pinpricks in the dark. “Party, Greg?” With a cigarette dangling from the corner of her mouth, she gave me her best impersonation of something desirable and I stifled a laugh.
I tried to be nice because she’d been someone’s little girl once. I saw the father who died and the succession of her mother’s boyfriends that turned the little princess into a whore. The last decade she’d spent on the street had polluted the soul she’d been born with almost beyond recognition. I knew a monk who would have called all those hard lessons opportunities for personal growth. I called it a shame.
“All partied out, Miss Jimenez.”
Her eyes roamed freely over me and she said, “For you it’s half price.”
“Hard to refuse, but you know how Sarah feels about that. Speaking of, why’d you dime me out to her about my score?”
“You know, she can be persistent. ‘Sides, she was all proud, telling me you were cutting back on the smack. So I jus’ had to say to her, no sister, you’re man is a junkie to the core.”
I nodded at her thoughtfulness and started toward the door. She stepped to intercept me and reached out a dirty hand.
I grabbed her wrist and wrenched it sideways. Hard enough to move her along, but not hard enough hurt. She smelled of cheap perfume, cigarettes and that musky pungency of stale sex.
“No touchy the goods, Anna.” Skin to skin was rough on me. I was cool not being cruel to this broken spirit, but that didn’t mean I wanted to be her friend.
The used-up woman shot me a spiteful look but didn’t press it. Instead she looked away and said, “S’okay, your loss.”
Loss. A common theme throughout my existence.
I brushed past her, not inhaling, and pushed open the unlocked door.
Inside, I braced my hand against the wall where mailboxes were once mounted. I waited while the tingly little wave of post-high nausea swept through me. When I was sure I wouldn’t puke up my pancakes I picked my way through the garbage in the dark hall to the room I shared with Sarah.
The hinges gave a screeching protest as I pushed the door open. I flicked the light switch, forgetting the electricity was off. Or maybe the bulb was burned out, I forget. Enough red neon came in from the no-name liquor store across the street that I could make my way through the sparse furniture to the kitchenette. The light started with one letter and added one until all were lit and then it blinked on and off twice before starting again. It wasn’t quite a strobe, but the effect was great when I was lit. Not so good when I was trying to hold down my pancakes.
I opened the refrigerator and got a whiff of something old, but no light came on. So it must be the electric. I found a stash of fast-food ketchup packets behind the jug of vinegar I used to cut my smack, and slammed the door shut.
I should save them for when I was hungry, but I wanted to get the acidic taste of bile out of my mouth. I bit in and sucked a few down.
I spun at the sound of a little thump on the counter. Disembodied yellow eyes stared reproachfully at me. As the U-O-R blinked on, the rest of Milton came into view.
He gave me a low rumbling meow, followed by a shorter, louder one for effect.
“I’m not in the mood, cat.”
Milton continued to stare and then slinked his inky-blackness across the counter, sitting on the edge, facing me but looking away. The cat pulled away as I tried to scratch him between the ears and repeated his short loud meow.
“Didn’t Sarah feed you?”
I rummaged in a cabinet while the cat paced the counter, watching. I finally found a little pull-top can of tuna and left it open on the counter for him.
The overcoat made a rustling swish as I dropped it in the hall. I went into the bedroom and flopped down on the thin mattress resting on the floor. I rolled over on my back and tried not to think of Sarah.
The blood red neon went through its brighter, brighter, off, and on routine and I stared at the archipelago of dark moldy splotches on the ceiling.
Sarah was liable to do something stupid. I didn’t see it, but I knew she was going to warn that Dominican girl. This was a really bad time to play the Good Samaritan.
Milton padded in the doorway and hopped up on to my chest. His breath smelled of fish and his yellow eyes bored into me.“She made her bed cat,” I said. Sometimes I think cats are tuned into something the rest of us can’t see. Other times I think they just serve as a really good vehicle for our own guilt.
“I’m not the hero she thinks I am.” Milton never blinked.
I rolled the cat off and said, “Fine. But you owe me for this one.”
I grabbed my overcoat on the way out to rescue my friend. The friend that had saved me so many times from falling any further than I already had.
03.
Five blocks and a bridge later, and I’d left the multi-storied tenements for a real neighborhood.
A row of small frame houses huddled together in the dark. I could tell Sarah was close, but not exactly where. I was good with general directions, but not so good with specifics. I slowed and tried to concentrate. Her soul was masked to me, so it was hard to place her. I recalled the image of the Dominican girl’s soul and reached out with my mind to find it. The blinking lights of all of the other souls bound in flesh in this crowded city masked hers. Ahead and to the right. I skirted a row house blocking my way and went into the alley beyond.
I paused and closed my eyes. The crash of glass and a scream led me to where I needed to go. I stumbled on a length of rebar protruding from a tidy heap of garbage in an alley and grabbed it up. I vaulted over the sagging chain-link fence and stumbled through a cluttered yard to the rear door of a house. Locked.
Another scream, muffled and in pain this time, but it wasn’t Sarah. I kicked the door in, ran through the empty kitchen and knew I’d be there again. Creaking floorboards indicated movement above. I rounded the corner and bounded up the stairs. There in the hall, half out of a doorway loomed a vision from Maria’s dreams. Maria knelt in the hall beyond and called out to me.
It stood taller and broader than me. Great leathery wings stretched out from the second set of scapulas. One wing in the hall, the other reached back into the room. The smoky gray skin was thick and covered in oozing boils where the ancient words had been written. It turned to me and paused, the eyes were dead, the pupils blown. The skin of the lower face had torn away and the yellow-white mandible shown through.
“Araqiêl? Is that you, little brother?” His voice rasped like a file being pulled across a steel pipe.
“Semjaza. It’s been a long time.” I stood ready on the balls of my feet. “You look terrible,” it rasped. “Yeah. Not so bad as you, though. You look like hell, Sem.” The nausea, the after effects of the drugs, all extraneous thought drained away as my body readied itself for battle.
Semjaza shrugged and the upper half of the face smiled. The lower half didn’t have enough skin to complete the expression and it leered. “What can I say? Brimstone is bad for the complexion.”
“I can’t let you take her,” I said abruptly. I flexed my fingers on the rebar held down at my side.
The demon looked at the girl, and then back at me. “You always were a sucker for the pretty ones, Ara. Capital vices and all.”I shrugged and turned the motion into a twist as the demon shot out a twisted reptilian claw. Eight feet in an instant. It cut through the fabric of my coat, but didn’t touch skin and I slashed down with the length of iron.
His skin blistered and hissed where the bar struck, leaving a thick wide burn. The iron rod smoked and glowed red where it had touched Semjaza. Iron was good for that with demons. Something about a fire elemental being struck with an earth element. Like a metaphysical game of rock-paper-scissors.
Semjaza hissed at me. I had seen him leading hosts of angels to war once, and now he hissed like a cat.
The hallway was too narrow for this slugfest. The demon was bigger and stronger than me. I wouldn’t last long if I couldn’t maneuver.
“How did you come to the middle world, Sem?”
“Crack in space and time, little brother. Same as before. You remember that Ara, don’t you? What you did to me? To your brothers?”
I backed slowly to the head of the stairs.
“Ara, don’t go away mad. Or is it Greg? Isn’t that what the sweet-meat called you?”
“Yeah. It’s sort of a nickname. Short for egregori.” I didn’t know whom he meant by sweetmeat. Sarah? The ward hid her soul, so that Semjaza and his friends couldn’t take it but it also meant that I didn’t see her well.
“Ah, the watchers. That was the job wasn’t it? Before the fall?”
I nodded and felt for the steps.
“That is where you lost your wings. Did Gabriel take them from you? Clip you?”
“Nope. Gideon, with his terrible sword.” I didn’t care to rehash this with him. I just wanted to keep him engaged.
“Gideon. I hate that sanctimonious bastard. I was cast down by then though, wasn’t I?”
I took the stairs slowly. One at a time. I noted the inner phalange of his wings had a thick, hooked talon, two thirds up from the base to the end.
“We don’t have to fight Ara. Sêmîazâz made you an offer to join the team and it’s still good. Bygones and all?” The laugh which followed was even more hollow than his speech.
“Sorry, I’m not interested.” He couldn’t finish what he had come to do with me here. I would either have to be run off or destroyed.
“You owe them nothing Ara. They turned their backs on us.”I reached the bottom step and kept backing into the little foyer, and said, “We turned away, Sem. Not them.”
Even though I saw it coming, I couldn’t avoid the wing as it snaked out. The talon sunk into my neck with a wet sound. A thick rope of blood fell out onto the tiles as the talon retracted. The hole it left in me fizzed and I swung the iron rod at empty air. The second wing snicked out impossibly fast, the talon sank into my shoulder, and back. Again I swung the length of iron at nothing. Bubbling ooze ran down from the holes in me.
“Time is coming to an end, Ara. We’ll bar the crack and then we will feast on the children of clay.”
He lunged at me again and I dodged. I saw a plastic grocery bag on a sideboard. Through the plastic I could see the little girl holding an umbrella on a blue background and knew it was the salt I had told Maria to get.
I feinted with the iron rod and twisted to grab the bag. Semjaza’s index and middle fingers stabbed into my flesh below the ribs. I twisted away, but his talons scraped against the underside of my rib cage and pulled me in. The pain pulsed as I twisted like bait on a hook. The wing talon pinned me through the bicep as I tried to raise the iron rod.
“Where will you go when you die, little brother?” I had no answer. “It ends now, Ara.”
“Yes,” I exhaled. I briefly contemplated letting him have me. If only it could be so easy. I sank my fingers through the sides of the little round box and the salt spilled out of the holes I made. I slammed my hand into his face and packed the salt into his eyes, his shattered nose and the gaping hole of his mouth.
He screamed and released me. His flesh bubbled and fizzed where the salt touched him. It was like salting a snail. I held the iron rod with both hands and stabbed it into the left side of his chest as deep as I could. I rode him over, still holding the rod.
The flesh smoked. A red ring formed in his chest around the iron spike, and I pushed harder, pinning him down to the step like an obscene butterfly.
My hands burned. I had to hold. If he got the spike out, he might still heal. The hot red halo spread outward, leaving gray, charred coke behind.
He thrashed. The talons of his wings slashed my coat and sliced strips of flesh from my back. My hands blistered with the heat of the rod. Semjaza stiffened and let out a rasping exhalation as he emolliated. I leapt back and watched him turn to dust and ash.
I bounded over his outline of melted acrylic carpet and scorched wood and up the stairs.
Maria still knelt where I had left her. I hadn’t seen it before, but she cradled the body of what must have been her mother in her lap. Her body wracked with sobs, but no sound escaped.
“Where’s Sarah?” Maria didn’t respond. “Did Sarah come?” I asked with more conviction. Maria didn’t respond but instead cast a glance at the doorway in the hall. I followed her eyes and saw Sarah crumpled just inside the broken window.
“No. No-no-no.” My wounds were forgotten as I crossed the small room and dropped to my knees. I reached down and pulled her broken little body to me.
“Oh no. Not her.” I reached down and brushed the wild dark hair with the red-brown roots from her blood-smattered face.
“No,” I keened. I pulled her body to me and rocked her slowly back and forth. A friend. A confidant. A protector. An empty shell. I cried and spoke of my bereavement in the ancient languages.
When I had no more tears to cry I laid her down gently. Then I riffled through her pockets with my blistered hands, until I found the fifty bucks.
I would need it later for Beenie.
04.
Perched on the bench inside the second ambulance, Maria watched through the open rear door as the first ambulance pulled away quietly. Removing two bodies didn’t require sirens. With trembling hands she pulled the paramedic’s light blanket tightly around her shoulders, as much for comfort as response to the cold. Looking down, she studied the odd pattern of drops on her shoe. The spots on the outside larger and rounded, while those toward the instep were smaller and more oblong. “Is she in shock?” a man asked from outside the ambulance. The paramedic inside with Maria, the stethoscope still in her ear, glanced up from her clipboard and said, “Her vitals are all good. Still dazed, I think, but she’ll be okay.”
“Can I speak with her now?”
The stocky young brunette shrugged, draped the stethoscope around her neck and slid out of the ambulance. “She might not be ready to talk, but yeah, you can speak with her.”
The man behind the ambulance leaned back to look up. His pugnacious brow furrowed over glinting little eyes. He said, “Miss Maria Furcal? I’m Detective Graves and this is Detective Etcher. We need to speak with you.”
Other policemen had asked Maria questions, but left her alone when she didn’t respond. She continued to look at the dark stains, almost brown now that they were dry, on the pale canvas uppers of her deck shoes. One drop of her mother’s blood had landed under a lace, without marking the cotton string at all.
“Ms. Furcal, I’d like to talk to you about what happened in there.” The squat detective with the comb-over jerked his head toward the house.
Maria tried to focus and still the shiver running through her. “T-terrible things happened. Terrible things.”
Another man stood behind this Detective Graves that addressed her. The other was better dressed, standing just outside the ring of light spilling out the back of the ambulance. His coat was dark, off-the-rack, but tailored to fit, not hang as you are like Graves’. He was hard to see distinctly, with his coal black skin and shaved head, large and strongly built. One big hand held a little notebook and the other a pen, thumb pressed against it.
“Yeah. Listen, I understand this may be hard. But we need to ask you some questions so that we can figure out who did this. To your Mother, and that other girl.”
Maria’s eyes were drawn back down to her one bloodspeckled shoe. Images tumbled in her mind. What had she really seen?
She remembered the girl, Sarah, mashed between those massive hands like they were rolling up a newspaper. Her mother’s neck cut, but not with a knife. Her throat just opened when the hand wiped across. And there was the junkie who said he was an angel. The smells of burning and then the quiet.
Quiet until the sirens and the uniformed policemen came. Two at first, with their guns, and later the others. They said for her to step away, but she didn’t. She rocked her Mother and prayed, and cried. She thought they would shoot her and it would be over.
But they didn’t. When the ambulances came they led her to one and took her shrouded mother’s corpse to another. And now Maria sat here cold. Cold on the street in front of her dead mother’s house. Tears welled up as she pulled the blanket tighter and tried to hide in the rough folds.
“Ms. Furcal, we need to discuss what happened here. Do you want we should take you to the hospital, or to the station?” Maria couldn’t respond. Even if she could find her voice, she had no idea what to say. Hadn’t they been inside to see for themselves?
“Frank,” Detective Etcher said. He put his hand on the older, shorter man’s shoulder and said quietly, “We’re not getting anything from this one.” One of the police cars still had the light on top going. No siren, just the light, and Maria watched the alternating red and blue reflect off Detective Etcher’s smooth scalp.
Detective Graves shrugged, but not forcefully enough to dislodge his partner’s hand.
“Ms. Furcal. Is there someone we can call that can be with you?” Detective Etcher slipped his little notebook into an inside coat pocket. As the fabric settled Maria noticed his police badge, suspended by a folded leather backing that tucked into his front pocket. No name, just a number. Eighty-nine, zero, six, sixty-six.
“I have no one now.” The two detectives shared a look and Detective Graves beckoned the paramedic back closer. He said something to his partner and Detective Etcher stepped back.
To the paramedic, Detective Graves said, “Why don’t you take her to county? Just to be sure. They can keep her overnight.”
After a brief discussion, the paramedic agreed and then trudged around to the front of the ambulance to confer with her driver.
“Ms. Furcal, we’re going to have you taken to the hospital. You’ll be met there later and then see if we can’t figure out something then. That sound okay?” Detective Graves asked.
“I need my purse,” Maria said. “And maybe, things.” She didn’t know what she needed. She didn’t want to go back inside, but she didn’t want to leave either.
“I’ll tell you what. We’ll have one of the female officers gather some stuff for us to bring in to you. When the crime scene is cleared. That sound okay to you?”
Maria nodded absently.
The paramedic returned, clambered into the ambulance and closed the door on Maria.
“You been inside yet?” Graves asked his partner as the ambulance drove away.
Etcher nodded and said, “Just when we first got here, I was interviewing the neighbor, a Mr. Talamantes.”
The first officers to arrive had described the scene when they called for homicide and the Paramedics. Graves and Etcher had arrived together, but split up, Graves looking first in the house and meeting his partner at the ambulance to talk to the witness. Some witness.
As they headed back up the short driveway Graves said, “Looks like someone jumped in through the window. Then killed that little homeless chick.”
“How’d the murderer get in through a second story window with no fire escape?”
“Hell if I know. Maybe our guy is the Mothman. Anyway, then he goes into the hall and whacks the old Lady. And then..” Graves trailed off and made a circling motion with his hand.
“And then he leaves Ms. Furcal as a witness, and burns a man-shaped splotch on the carpet on the way out?”
“Sounds dumber when you say it,” Graves chided. “I’m thinking drugs. Look of that skinny burnout, it could’a been drugs, all right. Cutting the old PR lady, that don’t make sense though.”
Graves pulled a pair of latex gloves out of his pocket and passed them to his partner as they came up to the house. “Forensics guys better be done. Ever notice how after those CSI shows came out, they start getting all cocky about their crime scene?”
“Anybody that slows you down is getting cocky,” Etcher said.
“ ‘Cept you; I think you’re a showboat helping or not.” They ducked under the black and yellow do-not-cross tape and entered the little foyer.
Snapping on his own gloves, Graves said, “Some place for a blood bath, eh? Where’s the Hispanic male?”
“Talamantes? I left him in the kitchen.” Etcher pointed with his heavy chin down the hall.
Uniforms milled about. Two officers and a forensics tech blocked the hall. Graves pushed past the two uniforms, they were the first on the scene and he’d already spoken to them. Their part was done, and they should have gotten back out on the street to serve and protect, instead of malingering at his crime scene.
Graves found a female officer and asked her to gather some of the woman’s clothes and find her purse, to take to the Hispanic female later.
Graves continued into the cheaply furnished kitchen, intact but for the splintered wood at the kicked-in doorjamb. The redheaded forensic kid with the splotchy complexion was sitting at the little Formica table across from the skinny old Hispanic male. Both of them cradled fresh cups of coffee, talking about nothing. They glanced up quickly when Graves walked in.
“Making yourself comfortable with the deceased’s coffee?” Graves asked.
“She said it was okay,” the kid said. “First time I hear forensics communing with the dead.” The kid smiled a little and said, “No, the younger one.” Graves gave him a look that indicated he thought it inappropriate to ask a woman suffering shock if he could mooch her coffee. He might have pushed it instead of just telling him to beat it, but Etcher broke in.
“Frank, this is Mr. Talamantes. He lives next door. The guy that called it in.”
The Hispanic male, late-fifties maybe early sixties, sat in a housecoat and slippers, fidgeting now with his cup. Mr. Talamantes and Graves exchanged greetings, before Graves asked him what happened. They sat and Etcher pulled out his notebook again. He’d already gotten a good first pass, but he was the thorough type.
Talamantes described what he had seen again; the crash and the screams, and the following silence. That’s when he called nine-one-one. As he stood on his back porch trying to decide if he should go over, he saw a man leave through the back door. His description sounded like any one of a thousand junkies.
“You’ve been a big help, Sir. I’m going to type this up, and then bring by a statement tomorrow for you to sign. Does that sound all right?” Etcher asked.
“Yes, anything I can do. Maria and her daughter were good people. She did not deserve to have any more violence in her
life.O” n the way out, Graves got the clothes from the female uniform. She had stuffed them into a plastic grocery bag and handed the purse over separately.
Graves said, “Thanks, hon,” and the female officer gave a little attitude with the eye roll.
As they left Graves told Etcher that it just wasn’t human; the crazy way people dealt with one another.
05.
Maria held her mother’s flower print dress to her face, not caring that her tears soaked it. Perched on the edge of the small vinyl sofa meant for visitors to the four-person hospital room she sobbed softly in the first light of morning. The dress smelled of her mother. The mother who had always protected her. That was the last thing she had done in this life. The way she died doing this was horrible, the blood, and the thing that caused it. Maria tried to picture that killer, but she could only see the impression of fear, like an after-image from staring a light. It was like the man from her dreams but real, tangible, and smelling of burnt matches and cabbage.
She had spoken about this before with her pastor and the two prayed about the dreams, but they didn’t go away. A friend from the shop had told her of a man who could see into dreams. Not like a psychiatrist or a tarot reader, but real. That’s how she had met Greg and the girl, and now she was here.
End of this sample Kindle book.
Enjoyed the sample?