Neil Dougherty hated his
job. He hated his apartment. He hated the quiet little town that he
grew up in. That's where his quiet little job and quiet little
apartment were. He hated his quiet little life. He scowled as he
tried one more time to tie a decent knot in his tie. He hated ties
and he hated the suits they adorned. Actually, he liked this suit,
but he really hated this town and he
really, really hated his job. Oh how he hated being an insurance
agent. Most people he knew didn't want insurance. Why? Because they
never needed it.
Neal
wondered what day it was. They were all the same these days. Every
weekday morning of the last five years. He would shit, shower, and
shave while the early morning news played in the background on his
pride and joy, a sixty-five-inch
flat screen TV. Hanging there, it actually dwarfed the walls of the
tiny apartment. It was incongruous, he thought, with the rest of the
furniture. That was better than being what? What was the opposite,
congruous? The rest of the furniture he had found while prowling the
local Goodwill and a few yard sales. His mother said he was thrifty.
His father, on the other hand, called him a skinflint. Said he was
like his Grandpa Dougherty, a miserly
old Irish goat.
His father had made a lot of money in the insurance business, the
benefit of being the only game in town, and saved a lot of money, the
benefit of growing up the son of a skinflint. He also spent a lot of
money, the benefit of being married to his mother. She was the head
cheerleader who traded in the high school quarterback for the high
school nerd. The American Express Black Card in her wallet told her
it was the right decision.
During
his own high school years, Neal had worked part-time
for his dad in the office. It was spending money and made his dad
happy enough to have bought him a relatively new car for his
sixteenth. It was just a Tercel that they would affectionately call
the Turd-cell, but the truth was that it was a lot nicer than his
friend's old jalopies. He still drove the Tercel and it still had
low miles. The benefit of being thrifty, he would say. The benefit of
being cheap, his friends would claim.
He
had tried to spread his wings and fly, right after graduation. It
seemed to him, that he had taken every crappy job he could, in hopes
that it would lead to something better. The horse stable job had led
to blisters, the florist job had led to allergies, and the underage
bartending gig had led to an underage DUI. His father had swept that
one under the table
but managed to bring it out and dust it off every Thanksgiving for
the past ten years.
Growing
up in a small Midwest village was bad enough, there wasn't any way
he was going to live here forever. Whoever heard of a village
anymore? And that is all that Kermit was. Sorry little place wasn't
even big eneough to be a town. It was barely large enough to warrant
a spot on the state map. On the county map it appeared a regular
metropolis, and compared to a few of the neighboring villages it may
as well have been. At least it had actual businesses and not just
trailer parks known for their meth manufacturing. Still, that wasn't
enough to keep a young man here. Not for the past five years.
Five
years, he thought. Five years almost to the very day. "Five years
that I'll never get back," he thought, angrily. On the bright
side, he had stuck it out five years. "Give me five years," his
father had said, "and I'll make something out of you." He had.
An insurance agent.
He
was just about ready to head out to the office. It was just a few
blocks away from the crappy, cramped apartment he rented. He could
afford better but, "I'm thrifty," he told himself. His father
called it 'The Hovel" and never stopped by. His mom, on the other
hand, stopped frequently and dropped off all sorts of goodies.
Leftovers from home and brownies and chocolate cake from scratch. She
insisted he was too skinny and should move back home so she could
fatten him up. He hated the phrase 'fatten him up'. It made him
feel like he was going to the slaughter. In truth, he was in decent
shape. He had ran track in high school and still ran five miles on
the weekends and on the treadmill next to his bed
if the weather was inclimate.
He glanced outside to gauge the weather even though the news had been
on all morning. It was foggy. Not just foggy, he thought, really
foggy. And I really hate fog, he thought. The weather was
inclimate, he thought. He liked that term. It had always meant a day
off from school. Now, it usually meant things were shitty outside.
He
had never seen fog like this before. His 'hovel' was on the
second floor of the unfortunately named Cox Building, but it was like
looking out into a cloud. A bluish cloud that didn't seem quite
right. Something about the way it moved seemed off. It seemed to be
climbing the building like some fast growing vine, exploring,
searching. Across Bohner Street (of course,
the Cox Building was on Bohner Street) the fog looked as if it were
sending out tiny tendrils to explore and try and find some opening to
exploit. It was more than creepy. Neil checked his window to make
sure it was shut tight and locked without even thinking of it. He
felt a chill despite the fact that it was already getting warm
outside. Too warm for fog, he thought. Well, it will burn off soon.
He
turned back to the enormous TV and began flipping through channels to
see if there were
any late breaking weather reports. Or accidents, he thought without
knowing why. There weren't and when he turned back to the window,
it was all but gone. Just a few fine wisps lingering down along the
edges of the old brick buildings that lined Bohner Street. His
thoughts of 'odd' and 'where had it gone?" were quickly
displaced by a "Shit, I'm late." He grabbed his compulsory
polyester jacket and car keys. He glanced around the room for
anything he might be forgetting, and with a crazy pirouette, he
headed out the door to face the day.
It
was early but warm and sunny. He decided to walk the three blocks or
so to the office, but remembering he was running late, took the car
instead. After getting in, getting out, and finding a parking space,
it probably wasn't any faster than running. He could always drive
home at lunch, then walk back, stopping to grab a bite at the cafe
next door. He noticed, as he pulled away from the curb, there was
still some of that crazy blue fog lingering along the gutter. It was
receding, almost as if some giant unseen vacuum was sucking it up. He
had never seen fog "burn off" like that.
He
made a left onto Main Street and headed toward the office. It was on
his right, on the corner of Main and Walnut. There was a public
parking area behind the office. It had once been the site of a meat
packing company, back around the turn of the century. The last turn,
that was. It had had many reincarnations since then, including a flea
market, a
doctor's office, and for one week, a discotheque. Now it was gone
and in its place, a parking lot.
Every
morning he made the right on Walnut and parked in the village's
little lot. He would then cut up the alley that separated his office
building from the one next door that housed the cafhe usually ate
at. This morning he considered parking in front. One of his father's
cardinal rules was to never park in front. Those spaces were for the
customers. His father wouldn't be in today. Since he had recently
joined the "semi-retired" he only made appearances on Tuesday and
half days on Thursday and Fridays. And of course, whenever he damn
well felt like it, he would remind his employees. Still, Neal gave it
careful consideration before taking the space closest to the
intersection. A day like today, Neal decide, he would most definitely
be on the golf course. He again thought of the strange blue fog and
wondered if it had reached all the way out to Raccoon Run Golf
Course. He imagined his father wearing outlandish plaid pants
stomping around the parking lot and waiting for the heavy fog to
dissipate.
He
hadn't noticed, until after he had parked and got out of the car,
that the town seemed almost deserted. It wasn't a thriving
metropolis by any stretch of the imagination, but there was usually
more business on a Wednesday morning than this. A few years back, the
town fathers or village elders or high muckety-mucks, had called a
meeting to discuss the future of Kermit. Ever since the Army Corps of
Engineers had dug a lake for no practical purpose back in the 70's,
the town had been cut off from the interstate. Cut off from
civilization. Cut off from progress and quickly becoming the Town
That Time Forgot. So they had reinvented Kermit as an antiquing mecca
and arts and crafts paradise. It wasn't any of those things, but
the main street was now full of little shops that were normally
livelier than this morning would indicate. Neal regarded the lack of
cars and people as no more than a curiosity not worthy of a second
thought.
He
walked toward the door proclaiming Dougherty Insurance Agency in a
preposterous old-timey
script, twirling his keys around his finger. He locked his car doors
with the key fob, pausing momentarily for the tell-tale beep, then
continued on to unlock the office door. He again paused with the door
open wide. Something wasn't right. There was a definite odor about
the office that shouldn't be there. Some old buildings have their
own particular musty smells but this was the smell of decay and rot.
Maybe a rat, he thought. The building was old and occasionally some
critter would crawl into its nooks and crannies and breathe its last.
He would have to call Pete, the weird pest control guy.
He
propped the door open to air it out some, using a little wooden wedge
for a doorstop, and clicked on the lights. The fluorescent bulbs
protested momentarily then finally lit up the small office. Four
desks were crammed in there with Neal's dad's office in the back,
behind the door marked Private. There were two agents besides himself
and the desk closest to the door belonged to Magdalena Bukowski, the
secretary cum receptionist cum mother hen. Her husband Albert was
chief of police in Kermit and the primary reason that his long ago
DUI had gone away.
The
other two desks belonged to Englebert Linden and Richard Foss. Linden
was a scarecrow of a man. He only worked part time as he was
currently in his seventh summer of college pursuing an ever elusive
two-year
degree. Richard Foss was Neal's brother-in-law and de facto boss
when Donal Dougherty was out of the office enjoying his
semi-retirement. Linden was all right, Neal supposed, but Richard was
a giant pain in the ass.
Neal's
sister, Emily, was a slightly prettier version of Olive Oyl and Dick
Floss, as he was known in high school, was the only boy who had ever
asked her out. They were both three years older and had got married
three weeks after graduation. Had to get married. Olive Oyl was
gaining weight and Bluto was the proud papa.
Back
then Richard was known as that big dumb Foss kid and his potential
earnings were meager at best. So rather than see his homely daughter
impoverished, Donal Dougherty stepped in and
gave Richard a
job. A career, it
would seem. By means of seniority and more mouths to feed, Richard
had been promoted to vice-president. Donal had wanted that for his
only son, but Neal had fought him for years and had only come into
the fold recently. Donal secretly wished his son-in-law would have
that inevitable heart attack and with the help of a boob job maybe
his daughter could remarry back into the human race.
Because
he lived closest, and more importantly, because his father had
ordained it, Neal was the first one in. He opened up, turned on the
lights and adjusted the thermostat. He would make coffee, check the
copier for paper and ink, and empty the trash if forgot from the
previous day. Maggie would be in next and immediately go to work. She
was cheerful and had the kind of pleasant face only chubby girls ever
had, not quite pretty but not wholly unattractive. Englebert would
drag in or not, depending on his schedule. He would flop into his
chair and moan about the disadvantages this world had heaped upon
him. He would threaten that one day
when he had obtained his degree from Southwestern State Community
College, things would be different. Then it would be Richard. Dick
Floss. He would be eating a banana, or an orange, or a muffin and
looking like some great ape. The day would drag on with mind-numbing
monotony and end with Neal at home, collapsing on the couch, turning
on his big TV, and ruminating about his oh so dull and humdrum
existence.
Right
on time, Maggie Bukowski came bustling into the office prattling on a
mile a minute in her inimitably cheerful manner. She smiled and waved
the best she could with one arm holding a bundle of files and the
other snaked through the straps of the largest purse Neal had ever
seen. Maggie was a woman from a bygone age, a modern incarnation of
Donna Reed. She always wore a dress and makeup and her hair was
always styled, thanks to Wanda of Wanda's Hair-do Shoppe. Her
husband Al was a lump of a man and considered himself most fortunate
for having landed such a beauty. They were truly happily married.
Once in a while life does work out, Neal told himself. At least for
other people.
She
dropped the stack of files on the desk and a flurry of loose papers
flew about. She then set her purse in her seat and began rummaging
about in the depths of that gunny sack of a purse. "I wonder where
everybody's got to?" she said into the bag. "I took MacArthur
in this morning
and crossed Apple, Plum, and Cherry Streets because I hate that new
light at Main and Oak and I didn't see a soul
the whole way. As a matter of fact, I only passed one car all the way
in from Lakeview Acres. Must have been some lunatic, they were
honking their horn and flashing their lights like crazy.
"Yes,"
Neal agreed. "It certainly is a quiet morning."
"Must
be that fog this morning. Strangest thing I ever saw." She pulled
out a pair white sneakers from the bottomless bag. Neal always
marveled at the endless assortment of things she would produce from
that giant handbag
over the course of a day. She sat down and began to exchange the
sneakers for high heels she currently had strapped to her oddly small
feet. Neal wondered silently how she managed to balance her girth on
those tiny things. He also wondered if the heels of her dress shoes
left tiny little divots when she walked.
"Yep."
Neal nodded still thinking mostly about her feet. "I've never
seen fog like that before, I don't think."
Maggie
looked at him curiously. "It was foggy all the way up here in
town?"
Neal
continued nodding. "Yep. Real thick too. And blue or at least
blue-gray.
Came all the way up to my second story window."
"That's
weird." She pulled an egg sandwich from the bag and began to nibble
thoughtfully. "I don't think I've ever seen fog in town before.
Out by the lake where me
and Al live, sure. All the time. Never all the way up here in Kermit
though. And it was
kinda blue wasn't it"
All
of a sudden, Englebert Linden fell into the office, by way of
careening off of the open door. He hit the floor like a bunch of
sticks, skinny arms and legs flailing. He tried to get to his feet
but slipped on the papers that had fallen from Maggie's stack and
fell back on his butt. He then quickly scrambled across the floor on
all fours like a crab. He pulled his chair out from his desk and took
its place, pulling his knees up to his ears.
"Hey
there, Bert. Everything all right this morning?" Neal asked looking
at Maggie who just shrugged and ate her egg sandwich.
"No,"
he shrieked in a voice way too high for even him. "They're
coming. Hide you fools."
Neal
fought back a laugh and asked, "Who or what are you hiding from,
Bert?"
"Zombies,"
he screeched an octave higher.
Neal
laughed a big braying "Hah" and Maggie snorted and chewed egg and
bread sprayed all over her desk. "Zombies?" they asked in unison,
Neal bending over to look at Englebert and Maggie rummaging around in
her bag for a napkin.
"Fucking
zombies," the man under the desk insisted. "Lock the doors and
hide you idiots,
before it's too late."
"C'mon,
Bert," Neal coaxed. "Get out from under the desk and let's get
you sorted out. Want some coffee?"
"Fuck
you and fuck your coffee."
Neal
was losing his patience now. Englebert wasn't the kind of guy to
pull a practical joke, not of this sort. He would
have never guessed him to be the kind
to have a nervous breakdown, but what else could it be? He bent lower
and offered the frightened man a helping hand when the sound of
breaking glass turned him around. Maggie screamed and fell backward
out of her chair, her tiny feet pointing straight up. Englebert
screamed at that, not even knowing what was happening. Neal would
have screamed if his brain would have accepted what his eyes said was
here.
Picking
himself up from the floor was Mohandas Vemulakonda, the proprietor of
The Flying Carpet Cafnext door. As he stood, bits of broken glass
from the shattered office door dropped to the carpet. His turban sat
askew and there were some small cuts on his face. But it was his eyes
that had stopped Neal cold. They were white, milky white, and they
seemed to be leaking. There was fluid running down his cheeks, into
his beard. His mouth was opened and spittle was flying with each of
his heavy breaths.
"Mr.
Vemulakonda? Are you OK?" Neal asked gently, knowing things were
most definitely not. "Mohandas, are you feeling all right?"
As
if to answer, the Indian cafowner snarled or screamed or growled.
Neal didn't know which, but he did know Mr. Vemulakonda had never
made that noise before. "He's a zombie," Englebert began to
shout. "Kill him before he gets us. Kill him."
"I'm
not killing anybody," Neal shouted in return. In the back of his
mind,
he was wondering how he would even go about such a thing. Mr.
Vemulakonda was not a large man but he was just an insurance agent
for Christ sakes. "He's just sick." Very fucking sick, he
thought.
Before
anyone could do anything, Richard appeared in the doorway. Dick Floss
to save the day. "What the fuck happened to the door?" he
demanded. Then looking at Vemulakonda, who had turned to face the new
arrival, "You fucking towelhead,
If you broke my..."
He
never finished that or any other sentence. Vemulakonda had snatched
him by the head and drove him back outside onto the sidewalk. Foss
weighed two hundred and fifty pounds naked on his bathroom scales,
but the man who ran the cafwith his younger brother had thrown him
down like he was a child. Now straddling him on the sidewalk he began
to beat his head against the concrete planter that housed a pear
tree. When the town fathers had reinvented Kermit, they had decided
to adorn Main Street with concrete planters holding fruit trees that
in turn held twinkling lights during the Christmas season. The last
thing Richard Foss seen was that pear tree. Blood splattered and
flowed freely from his head. With each blow against the planter, Neal
could hear the bone break and splinter. Richard's legs shook
spasmodically. Then he lay still.
Mr.
Mohandas Vemulakonda had been demoted from a 'him' to an 'it'
as the shrieking man under the desk screamed:
"Kill it, kill it." The cry was then taking up by Maggie, peering
over her desktop. Neal looked around wildly for some weapon. "How?
With what?" he was screaming back. Neal now felt that he had a
moral and possibly legal obligation to stop the man that sold him his
tuna melts and BLTs, but how?
"You
have to shoot them in the head," Linden was informing him even as
he tried to get further under the desk. "Shoot them in the head,"
echoed Maggie even though she would be the first to admit that she
wasn't up on current practices regarding the killing of zombies.
"With
what, a staple gun?" asked Neal now starting to feel panicky. He
knew his father used to keep a gun in the office. Donal Dougherty had
always been a hunter, but he had begun collecting pistols when Neal
was still little. Now that conceal and carry permits were allowed, he
had been among the first in the county to obtain one. Neal knew it
would be locked up if there was even one here and the keys were in
the now limp body of his brother-in-law. The thing that had been
Mohandas Vemulakonda, apparently satisfied now that Richard's head
was crushed like a melon, rose to his feet to face Neal.
"Fuck
me sideways," Neal said throwing aside the staple gun that he had
subconsciously picked up. He began to grab random objects, consider
their value in a life and death situation, and then discard them when
they didn't measure up. He was quickly finding that office supplies
were woefully lacking in their lethal capabilities. Then he
remembered the bat.
Richard
kept a baseball bat and several old gloves beside his desk. He played
softball on the weekends with a few other high school jocks desperate
to reclaim their former glory. He rolled over Richard's desk and
began to look furiously for the bat. It had fallen down and rolled
under the desk. While he was reaching for it,
he saw Vemulakonda
watching him. He wasn't moving other than his chest heaving up and
down as he breathed laboriously. His eyes were slowly clearing of
their milky film and slobber was running freely down his blood
splattered chin.
"Mr.
Vemulakonda can you hear me?" he pleaded. The crazed man began
slowly walking towards him. "Don't come any closer," Neal
warned.
"Kill
it," demanded Linden from under his desk. "Hit that fucker,"
screamed Maggie from as far under her own desk as her bulk would
allow.
Neal
closed his eyes and swung. The bat connected with nothing but air and
he spun completely around. Vemulakonda growled and snapped his jaws
at him. From behind the desk,
Neal was too far away. He could wait for his target to come nearer
or... Suddenly Vemulakonda turned towards Linden cowering under his
desk.
The
blood soaked cafowner sniffed the air in an eerily animal-like
manner and snapped his jaws. The primeval lizard brain at work. "Get
out of there," he yelled at Englebert, knowing that it was a
hopeless thought. Englebert Linden had already urinated all over his
cheap suit and was prepared to do even more in the way of relieving
himself of this morning's stress.
Neal
knew it was up to him to stop this madman. When his back was
completely turned to him, Neal slowly climbed up on the desk. His
slick dress shoes slipped a little on the papers strewn across the
late Dick Floss' desk. Neal wasn't sure what his next move would
be even as he executed it. Gripping the bat with both hands, he swung
it overhead
at Vemulakonda's still crooked turban. Not taking into
consideration the added height from standing on the desk, Neal swung
the bat into the acoustic ceiling.
Vemulakonda
turned back to face him, adding a snarl and two more jaw snaps for
emphasis. Neal frantically
pulled at the bat, trying to free it from the ceiling. The thing, or
whatever he had become, made a grab for Neal's legs. He jumped back
off the desk and landed in the office chair. It shot backwards, away
from the desk, pitching Neal forward. Still clutching the bat, which
came free of the ceiling tiles, Neal's chest landed with a thud on
the desk, and the baseball bat landed with a sickening whack on the
turban. The Indian, caught in mid growl, promptly bit his tongue off.
The
breath knocked out of him, Neal rolled off the desk and found himself
face to face with Vemulakonda. He was sitting beside Linden's desk,
legs splayed out and his hands
in his lap. His head was on his chest. He could have been taking a
nap, but the blood soaked turban, and the severed tongue, said
differently.
Under the force of the bat, his head broke open like an egg and blood
now covered his white eyes and foaming mouth and formed little
rivulets down his white dress shirt.
With
the threat now gone, Maggie got to her tiny feet. "Is he dead?"
she asked. "As a doornail,"
Neal replied. Linden crawled away from his desk. The carpet under his
desk had been soaked in piss and now blood was added to the mix. Neal
poked at the dead man with the tip of the bat. "What the fuck was
that all about?' he asked no one in particular.
|