Fell of Dark (21 page)

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Authors: Patrick Downes

BOOK: Fell of Dark
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Inaction

I WENT TO BUY
a gallon of milk and some cereal. How could I have been ready for what happened?

If you were to have asked me before this morning, “What did the man in the garage look like?” I would've been totally unable to answer. Tall, short, fat, thin? Blue eyes, brown, green, black? Bald? I don't know, I don't know. I only remember the garage and the window and the light; my broken arm; and I didn't have my belt.

I knew him. As soon as I saw him, one hand on his cart, scanning the cereal, only in profile, I knew him. I knew him. And you know what I did? Not a thing.

I had turned to concrete. I felt nothing for a moment, a long moment, as long as the life I've already lived. Then, he turned with his choice—Mini-Wheats, blue box, a splash of milk; I remember Mini-Wheats—and I saw his face. Maybe he's fifteen years older than me, hard to say, not much more. No sign of gray. No tiredness. The concrete melted, I found my skin, and all I could do, all I felt came to nothing more than a collapse.

Terror.

Thirteen years. I'm almost two and half times the height I was at five, fifty times as strong. I could have killed him with hardly any motion at all. Imagine everything I might have done to him, all the harm. Imagine the blood and broken bone.

Imagine him all chewed up.

Instead. Instead. Instead, instead, instead.

I did nothing. I let him pass. He hardly glanced at me. I was nothing to him.

I let him pass.

So I have to ask myself a question. What happened there? I was a little boy all over again, locked in a garage and helpless. No escape. Even when I recovered, even when I realized I was standing in the cereal aisle, even when I knew I could track him down in the store, knew I could hunt him and kill him, I did nothing. I let him go.

Am I a coward?

All this time I've been thinking I would be a hero. I had this idea I would save lives, give up my life willingly. But what did I learn this morning? I can't confront a criminal. I can't even go back in time and protect the boy I was, or punish the man who hurt him, hurt me.

Is there another answer? Quick, give me something before I break down completely. I'm enormous, I bleed, and the first time I can right a wrong, I turn into what?

Think, think.

I need an answer. Do you have one?

Maybe I'm not important enough to myself. Maybe once a victim always a victim. Maybe I'm not a vigilante. Maybe I don't have a thirst for vengeance.

Quarantine

FORTY DAYS. FORTY DAYS
the flood covered the earth before Noah could open a window. How that ark must have smelled. Shit, urine, sex, death, rot, birth, blood, saliva, fear, rage, impatience. Salt. All the ocean. So much water.

Forty days and nights Moses spent on the mount without eating or drinking—no water—before receiving the laws on two tablets. We assume he must have been awake the whole time, begging God constantly for revelation. Maybe he slept. Or waited silently, ready to fill His order. He must have lost weight, around fifteen pounds. Twenty? A lean messenger.

Quarantine. I read somewhere, the word
quarantine
means forty days isolated
.
Meant to stop the spread of disease. Quarantine: an enforced isolation.

God enforced Christ's quarantine. What was His disease? The Son of Man endured the desert, tempted by Satan or Lucifer, propped up by angels, hungry.

Where will I serve my quarantine?

I need the park. I need trees, ferns, brush, and a public water fountain. My quarantine near home. I'll sleep outside.

Will I, like Christ Himself, come out of the wilderness hungry? Or will I eat myself? A knife—. I think I should go empty-handed.

If I stare inward for forty days and nights, barely moving for hours at a time, what will I find? In me, what will I find in me? Or what will find me?

I'll write and write, still my greatest comfort—.

Wait. This is a fast, a deprivation. Deprivation before revelation, right? I must not bring pens and notebooks. I'll give up everything. I'll go empty-handed. I won't even bring you.

Response

LAST WEEK, I WATCHED
a man kill a rat with a cinder block. He simply dropped the block on the rat. Not a sound, no squeal, no crack. Next, the bastard picked up the block and dropped it again. No blood, but the rat must have been killed. A crowd of kids, surrounding the fenced-in schoolyard, clinging to chain link, watching a murder. Nothing should die in a schoolyard, not even a rat.

This time, I acted. No agony. No fear. Action.

“Mister.” I called over to the man. He held the rat by its tail, swinging it a little as he crossed the yard. “Hold up.” I walked up to him and took his shoulder. That instant, his arm turned to wood. “Bury your victim,” I said. “Up in the grass. One-handed. I'll stay with you until you're done.”

“Why?” A stupid, stupid man to ask a question of a giant. How could he know whether or not I appreciate the taste of human flesh? Stupid but afraid: “I'm sorry.”

“Bury the rat. Once you're done, I'm going to break off your useless hand to mark the grave.”

And I did.

Salvation

I'VE GONE BACK TO
the schoolyard every day for two weeks. Day after day, I walk around the fence. I don't expect to see anything other than kids yelling their heads off and running around like maniacs.

But I didn't expect to see a man kill a rat.

The city rat is our enemy, right? Ugly, sick, and vicious. That's what we think. Albino rats, those white lab rats, they're okay. They help us get to the bottom of our own brains. They help us sort out our diseases. These good rats go insane for us. They die for us.

City rats? They scavenge. They teach us nothing but fear. They make us angry.

I don't linger at the school. I don't pray. I walk around the outside of the yard to do nothing more than mark that spot where the rat died.
Ecce rat.

Morbid? You think it's morbid?

I don't go to the schoolyard to brood about death. I go to remind myself of something I don't understand but find awful and sad.

You're right, though. It's time I give this up. Or make it into something more.

Quarantine.

My forty days in the park: who will witness me? Who will tell me to pick up and go? The police? A homeless man, a hermit?

What happens to a passerby who comes to the park to die and stumbles across me?
There,
the passerby will think,
but for the grace of God, go I.

I imagine this. Days and nights in the park, fighting devils. Tiny demons, actually. They get caught in my hair and harass my eyes. I breathe them in, sneeze them out. They buzz my ears, like mosquitoes, and mine that vein running over the stone of my ankle. Then they lift away and vanish, but they've left their poison. I get sick. I throw up. I'm tired. Lord, how I'm tired.

All these days and nights to swat at demons. To listen for God, wait on God.

Imagine more. Halfway through, I can't say I've been tempted exactly, except by death. Suicide: the worst temptation. Satan's no fool. He doesn't even have to show up. The idea comes, inevitably, and twists up and comforts at the same time a sad person, or a person at wits' end.

Did Christ have to fight the will to die? How sad and angry He must have been. If He'd ended His life, though, more than one prophecy would have fallen down. He couldn't be allowed to die under the white sun and be buried in a wave of sand. But I could die. I could die and go unmissed.

My mother has Lincoln, so she wants for nothing. All they seem to do is hold on to each other and laugh. No. They walk. I don't even remember the last time I spoke to either of them alone without the other nearby. What do I do with this? I have both, or I have nothing.

The first week without food will be the worst. Headaches. Nausea. Delirium. Teaching the body to go without.

Fasting is an insult to the body. Proof of our will, right? Still, an insult.

Maybe I should sleep through it all. Hibernate—.

Impossible. Impossible and unwise. What if I sleep through the moment of my death?

Will I end my life in the park? No. No. I want to know why I've been put on this earth. What's a bloodletting? What's an everlasting flower? A never-ending cruciform? My mother whole? A wooden hand? Whatever else? All this speaks to my destiny, and I can't die before I know my purpose.

What will happen at the end of the fortieth day if I still don't have any insight into why I exist, why I suffer, why I'm hungry? What then?

Will I finally have you? Will you appear out of nowhere and lift me up and bring me home? Will you tell me I'm not a hero? Will you tell me to get cleaned up, go to college, and forget everything I've thought until now?

“Forget the miracles, Erik. I'm the only thing that's real.” You'll turn on the shower and hand me a towel. You'll take off my clothes. “Love is real. There's nothing else.”

“But what was the point?”

“Of what, honey?”

“Of any of it. The garage, my father's death, the headaches, the miracles, the frustration, the loneliness. It can't have been for nothing.”

“No, not for nothing. But not for any one thing, either. By the time you get out of the shower, your bleeding will be done and everything healed. We'll get something to eat. You'll sleep. Then you'll wake up and our life will begin.”

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