Posts tagged ‘suspense’

September 24, 2012

Flash Fiction: “The Bad-Ass Bet”

by Fred Fingery

The Bad-Ass Bet

It was sheer luck I ran into that slippery bastard Gamblin’ Pete at Hannigan’s Pub. I had to take advantage. Been trailing him for years but he was always always always a step or two ahead. Never seen him up close until that night and it was my one shot. I had just what I’d do.  Everybody knows Gamblin’ Pete don’t turn down a nasty bet if you’re talking real big-boy stakes. It’s how he gets his blood pumping. Only I prayed he’d hear me out to start with, because those goons were packing 38’s in their jackets. And Barry “Swiss Cheese” Fitz, he was there too. He sprays you full of holes then runs you over with his truck till you’re just about flat. I been looking for him too.

“If it ain’t Pete O’brien,” I said. I took off my straw fedora and placed it on the poker table sticky with beer.

Pete did a double take. Reaching into his shirt for his knife, alarmed, he said, “Who the hell let this bald sonofabitch in here?”

I drummed my fingers over the fedora I’d bought only an hour earlier at the boardwalk. “Wearin’ a hat today, on a whim. Never knew that’s all I had to do to get this close,” I tried to sound confident but I was shaking in my shoes. Already had two barrels pressing cold into my neck and back.

“You got big balls, Cop,” said Pete. He gave a look to Cheese. Cheese smiled, took a step closer.

Quickly, still cool, I said, “I hear you don’t turn down a bad-ass bet.”

Pete straightened a little. His face changed like when you switch a television channel and there’s another face. He smiled, delighted. “Maybe, maybe not. What’s the stakes?”

Only one thing about wagering with Pete—you don’t renege. He’ll get you, give you a hurtin’ you won’t believe. Anyone you care about too.

“You and me,” I said. “I win, you come to the station with me. No problems.” This didn’t faze him in the slightest. Rather the opposite—I swear the sick s.o.b. started to salivate. His eyes were bubbles about to pop. I remember how my heart raced. I thought, It’s do or die! I said, “You win: I retire, I leave law enforcement forever. And with me gone, you breathe easy.” Gamblin’ Pete had become my life and career, and if I wanted him I knew it’d take some real balls. And no guarantees either way.

The smile was frozen on Pete’s face like he couldn’t believe what he heard. “Back off, Cheese. I like these stakes.” And so I cut the deck and we played a hand.

And that is part of the reason why I manage Denny’s store #2234 on Sunset Blvd. in Los Angeles.

______________

For some more practicallyserious “noir” action, check out this flash-fiction story!

August 1, 2012

“It is I Who Lick the Garbage”

by Fred Fingery

Focusing on non-blog writing projects has forced me to place this blog on simmer—at least for the time being—but I can’t deny that the Blog-Post Assassin did good work when he whacked my blog post titled “Bigger Brother.” It’s dead. It’s in a hole a couple miles outside Vegas. And so I think I’d better start paying off Blog-Post Assassin before he comes after me and attacks my “About Derek” page or something. Plus, I may wish to use him again soon; there are more rats in my archives and they might need to have their buttons pushed.

So, anyway, here’s part 1 of his payment: the sequel to Crazy Moths. Check out the original story here (don’t worry, it’s only 200 words).

It is I Who Lick the Garbage (Crazy Moths II)

When Joe Jr. woke he was upside-down in the space behind the front seat of the car. There were some yellow map books in his face and as he fidgeted they scratched and smeared sand into his cheek. A candy wrapper crinkled inside his left ear. Somewhere above him in the world of the upside down car: a cracking, a shallow plastic cracking; something thudded madly into plastic to break it again and again. Through his cheeks and ears he felt the motor mumbling through the floor. The wheels wobbled side-to-side like they didn’t have orders. He thought We’re drifting, I feel it. Something’s wrong. The car’s leather stuff I can smell, and I can smell the fuzz of the seat covers above me, but there’s another smell too and it doesn’t belong. It smells like how meatloaf looks.

Kershmump! The front wheels of the car found something big in the street and hopped over it and Joe Jr. became weightless, he floated in the air like Russians, and when the car pounded back to the road he landed with his butt in the seat where he was supposed to be in the first place. He imagined it was a body they’d just run over, a dead body in the road. He didn’t see it but that’s what he thought it was.

“Dad?”

Joe Jr. saw his dad in the front seat where he was slouched, his head hanging low. He kept pistoning the dashboard with his knee—that was the plastic noise. He smashed it again and again without even really looking at what he was doing. There was a crack forming right there by the radio and you could see inside. He kneed it again. It wasn’t like he was mad, it was more like he was too lazy to stop himself from kneeing it.

“Dad?”

Knee knee knee in the plastic again and then you could almost see inside it. He kneed it and a bundle of wires came out like snot and then went right back in when he kneed the hole again. Joe Jr. thought about how baby birds push their way out of the eggs, how they keep being stubborn about it and they don’t stop until they’re out even though they don’t know they’re a bird in the first place. His dad kneed the hole again.

“Hey Dad.”

“It is I who lick the garbage,” his dad said right into his own lap as if there was a tape recorder there. He spoke all soft and annunciated for the non-tape recorder. He kicked the dashboard again and this time he broke clean through. Inside Joe Jr. saw shiny silver metal and wires. They rattled and moved like the silver insects you find under rocks.

“Dad, did you crap?” Because that was the smell that didn’t belong in the car. A cloudy smell like when his dad did business in the bathroom upstairs. Like when afterwards he would walk past Joe Jr. casually and then start giggling and shove him into the bathroom and hold the door shut so he couldn’t get out. Joe’d hold his breath in there but somehow that didn’t help because he smelled it through his mouth. “That’s how it smells on Mars,” his dad said one time. “That’s why no people go there.” Joe Jr. didn’t know what he was talking about and still didn’t. But it was the same smell in the car—Mars.

Mars had no business in a car.

“Dad?”

“It is I who lick the garbage,” his father said again, and that’s when Joe Jr. knew his dad’s mind was gone and that they got him. Scrambled him. They tantalized him with how they looked and with their colors. Rude colors, his dad would say. Very rude.

Past dad, past the windshield he saw they were about to jump another curb soon and then they’d be heading directly into Veteran’s Park. That’s where he used to draw penis animals in the sand and then scrape them away before anyone saw.

He saw the heavy wood play structure with the green-painted metal railings. They were going to crash into it in maybe a minute and he wondered if it would stop them or would they break through it. He imagined a bunch of pinwheeling kids jumping off the top of the railings as the car bulldozed through the structure. These images flailing about in his head, he squinted his eyes to look for kids on the structure—no kids, the park was empty. Then all of a sudden he screamthought: Oh wait look down look down you Stupid! He pulled away from looking out the window and just looked at his lap like he was supposed to. “Don’t look up or there they’ll be,” he said to remind himself the rules. But then he felt a breeze tickle the side of his neck and he looked up at the window anyway. It was open a crack! He hurried and grabbed the handle and swung it around and around super fast until the window shrieked tight with pressure. This took all his strength but he was proud of how fast he did it. He was pretty sure an adult couldn’t do it as fast as he just did it. He thought I’m stronger than normal.

ScreeThump! The car hit the curb and bounced down soft onto the grass where the brown-painted wood fence was, but their course would take them right past it. They were on a clean run for the play structure. Nothing between to stop them. Joe Jr. felt like he was on a boat heading for the dock with no boat-brakes.

Then, while he stared at his knee, he remembered his brother finally. Without turning his head he spidered his hand across the seat until it found his brother’s limp hand and he squeezed it hard for a while until he definitely felt a pulse. Then tears started to collect like a tea-bag behind the top of his nose because he knew then it was just him and him. He was unconscious but he was alive. Joe Jr.’s head felt like a coffeecup of mucus and if he moved or tilted at all it would start spilling nasty.

“We’re gonna be okay but they got dad,” he said, and he found it hard to get the words out. He wanted to cry now. He kept looking at his knee and said, “He’s like mom.”

Then the car dropped down into the sand that was really like the big front yard of the play structure. The tires hissed and graveled through the sand beneath him, treading along. To Joe Jr. the tires sounded like the blue and red Slushy machines at the store.

“Nudey? Nudey nudey? Nudey take a crap?” said his father into the tape recorder that wasn’t there. He punched through the knee-hole in the dashboard and his whole fist went in but it wouldn’t come back out right away. When it did there was blood and there was blood left in the hole in the plastic too.

Joe Jr. started to cry and watched the tears fall down onto his zebra shorts his grandma made him. He watched little raindrop dimples make the zebra shorts dark, and he felt the warm dots on his skin underneath. Very far and alone, that’s how he felt now—very far from a place where he didn’t have to be scared. If his brother were awake they could talk about something and that would be better than just him being here listening to his father. It would help a little to talk, but he was still asleep. Joe Jr. squeezed with his spider hand—yes, still asleep. Then he thought maybe it would be enough just to look at his chubby sleeping face. Just seeing his face would be better than looking at own his knee while he was crying while his dad punched the hole and hurt his hand more.

“Don’t look up or there they’ll be,” Joe Jr. warned himself but he didn’t listen. He looked up from his knee and looked at his brother there in the seat next to him.

But there was a crazy moth right on his brother’s eyelid just sitting there. It was moving its wings slow, back and forth, like it was sleeping and dreaming of flying.

Joe Jr.’s eyes became oval like plastic doll eyes and his world screamed upwards like a mad elevator and he squealed all the air from his lungs and the reason from his brain. He made sure to keep looking at his sleeping brother, keep looking keep looking until he no longer had an idea what a brother was.

July 9, 2012

“Jert Zylan vs. The Cytard II”

by Fred Fingery

Jert Zylan vs. The Cytard (Part 2)

Illustration by Mongol

Jert plunged through the hatch, smashed down hard on the airlock floor. Bloomf! A second later Ensign Dan came through, blubbercrunched right on top of him. Together they tumbled about in a big slime-slippery smash pile; legs hooped through arms, faces red and purple. Above them, outside in the fields of Sackjawit bluegrass, the Cytard lay belly up. Dazed, not dead.

Dazed himself, pancaked to the floor, Jert watched dreamily as little birds of brain fireworks chirped circles around his topsy-turvey view of the room. Then finally these birds got bored and flew up and out the airlock door, and that’s when Jert realized Dan was still on top of him. Gruntingly, slimily, Jert dug his way out from under Dan, got to his feet. Right off the bat about a gallon of brainblood fuel-injected his head and turned his knees to rubber plungers. He wobbled back and forth, reached out to steady himself on the wall nearby. “Computer!” He said into cheap, plastic intercom box right there by his hand, and as he spoke he made sure to hold his breath, to avoid getting a whiff of the flakey cave-gunk that coated his clothes. “Status report.”

A computer voice with a faint, faint Long Island accent came out through the speakers, “Welcome back Jert Zylan. All systems nominal, calibrated and synchronized per specifications. The ship will self-destruct as scheduled—15 seconds to detonation.”

Jert’s jaw fell slack. He snapped a look at Dan. “It’s Lahluu! She been pressing buttons! Quick!” Side-by-side they bolted from the room and, for a moment, got stuck in the door.

*    *    *

Jert and Dan burst through the hatchway into the cramped, cluttered control room. A hanging laundry-line of Ensign Dan’s pants and underwear and t-shirts formed a wall of damp garments, partitioning the room slantwise. On one side of this wall stood the ship’s washer and drier and hot water heater, dented and old and all crammed tight in the corner. On the other side: the main computer console and monitor, behind which sat the cyborg C15, slumped and inert, dream-drool syruping into his lap. The place smelled of grainy laundry detergent and wet fabric and maybe mold. Two rectangular lighting panels up high on the walls gave the room a dank yellow/green glow.

The ship’s computer said, “7 seconds to detonation.”

Jert made a beeline for the computers. In his haste he stepped solidly on the tail of an orange tabby cat named Ston, who’d been napping dead center in the middle of the floor. Said cat blasted o’er the room in one arcing squeal and disappeared down the cramped corridor.

“5 seconds to detonation,” said the computer.

“Don’t run so fast,” barked an oddly unflustered Dan, “You almost killed the cat!”

As Jert charged through the wall of laundry its hanging stringline caught on the hook of his neck and chin—it screeched down flappingly from its plastic rollers, the damp clothes ker-splatting all over everything: the chairs and the computers, the rusty dumbbells on the floor, the rowing-machine. A wide pair of Ensign Dan’s khaki shorts plumped down like two separate capes around sleeping-C15’s shoulders.

Jert, his head an inferno of popping brainbeats, found the blinky, buttony auxiliary console—his only chance—under a wet pile of his own v-neck t-shirts at the far corner of the room. He flung the shirts over his shoulder in bunches and clumps. One of them scooped down over Ensign Dan’s head.

Facing the auxiliary console as if it were his own personal evil genius, Jert knew damn well that his and Dan’s and Lahluu’s and C15’s and Ston’s lives all hung in the balance. It was his big moment to step up and be the closer he’d always half-believed he could be. But, with exactly two seconds to go before the ship exploded, he quickly found out he was the type of man that totally buckled under pressure. Like butter in a shaft of sunlight his mind melted, lost its edge. No, he wasn’t much of a closer at all! In his panic, the auxiliary-console transformed before his eyes into some kind of cockamamie alien contraption. And so, naturally, he resorted to punching the hell out of the thing and screaming. The metal casing of the panel dented and dented more. By sheer luck one of his wild, desperate punches connected with the big circular button marked “Sequence Cancel.”

“Destruct sequence cancelled,” said the computer.

Jert let himself melt like silk to the floor. He breathed deep and slow and waited for his heartbeat to return to its default murmur. Caressing his throbbing fist, a proud grin on his lips, he thought: A lesser man would have cracked for sure.

Ensign Dan trundled over to Jert, extended a hand. Jert didn’t take it. Didn’t see it. Nurturing a weird, preternatural calm, he said to the floor: “Where’s the kid? Where’s Lahluu?”

“I don’t know.”

“We said ‘don’t press any buttons,’” said Jert softly. “Did we say that or did we not?”

“Did.”

When Jert spoke again, his words came slow and with great care because he wanted to get all the facts straight, to make sure he deserved to be as angry as he was about to be. He said, “She had paper. We gave her all that white paper and colored pencils.”

“I know.”

“I even drew her a ninja attack she was supposed to color. Two ninjas fighting a triceratops. And there was a third ninja already spiked in the horns. The living ninjas had nunchuks.”

“I saw it.”

“It came out so good I even debated not giving it to her,” said Jert, full of pride. “I thought maybe I’d go ahead and hang it in the bathroom as is.” Finally he looked up from the floor, gave Dan a serene, saintly grin, “But I gave it to her anyway, Ensign Dan.”

“I bet she didn’t color it,” snapped Dan. “I bet it’s all crinkly and folded up too. Or, real fast, she colored the ninjas blue or something stupid.”

Jert went quiet again for about ten seconds. Then, with calm determination, with unblinking eyes, he said in the tone of a contractor finally getting around to the estimate: “Well, hell, I’d say there’s only one thing to do in this particular scenario, Ensign Dan. Just one thing, when it comes right down to it.” For a moment he looked away, off into space, and then finally he nodded to himself, confident in his decision. He said, “Uh huh, we’re going to take her outside and feed her to the Cytard.”

_____

To catch up on Jert’s adventures, check out part 1.

Or, for more sci-fi monster action, check this story out.

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