Fungus of the Heart (13 page)

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Authors: Jeremy C. Shipp

Tags: #Fantasy, #Horror, #General, #Short Stories (Single Author), #Fiction

BOOK: Fungus of the Heart
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Cleanliness

 

Monkey Boy sat on the floor, gasping for air. This had been one heck of a fight, and it had produced one heck of a mess. Blood, guts, everywhere. And if there was one thing rich, powerful people like these didn’t like, it was filth. After their meeting was over, the first thing they’d notice would be the eyeballs on the table—not the cuts on their arms or the massive gashes on the backs of their necks.

That was where Soapy came in. Monkey Boy reached in his pocket and set the little talking cube on the floor. “All yours.”

Soapy nodded (the best a soap could nod) and started licking. He dragged himself around and left a trail of sparkle in his wake.

Monkey Boy was sure glad Soapy had a thing for human flesh.

He sometimes wondered—but not too much, because he liked getting paid—why the rich people didn’t leave raw meat outside the door, like most people did to keep the zombies at bay.

After a few thoughts ping-ponged in his skull, he decided they just really, really, really, really didn’t like solicitors.

 

Hair in Strange Places

 

There came a point in human history when the void of poetic justice grew so large, irony itself anthropomorphized. Werewolves. Zombies were nothing compared to the werewolves. At least zombies wouldn’t put an acid tablet into a businessman’s wallet so the next time he wore it, the tablet would break, and burn a hole in his pocket—and his flesh. Zombies would never use laughing gas on clowns, or test cosmetics on corporate scientists, or gut fishermen. They wouldn’t steal a woman’s breast milk and feed it to a baby cow, or a woman’s egg and feed it to a chicken.

Monkey Boy, an expert in werewolfism, was often hired by parents to check on their children.

Today he sat on a glass table—and gobbled up the fresh batch of cookies the mother just finished baking.

“Would you like anything else, Monkey Boy? Soda? Tea?”

“Got any bananas?”

“No. I’m so sorry! I should have—”

“I’m just kidding, Mrs. Stevens.” He grinned. “I have a few questions for you before I go in there.”

“Go ahead.”

Monkey Boy scratched the top of his head. “You said Samantha’s been acting different lately. How exactly?”

“Well, she’s really sarcastic sometimes. She laughs at things I don’t think are funny. And she stays in her room a lot.”

“I see your point. I’ll go talk to her.”

“You won’t hurt her?”

“Not unless you pay me to.” Monkey Boy released a barrage of high-pitched chuckles and hopped off.

He leapt upstairs and entered the girl’s room without knocking.

The girl was on her bed, listening to music. She removed her headphones. “You…you’re Monkey Boy.”

Monkey Boy nodded and jumped beside her. He pointed a finger at her. “If you try to eat me, I swear I’ll slash your arteries.”

“I won’t.”

Monkey Boy sat and drummed his fingers. “Your mom says you’ve been acting kinda poopy lately.”

“Kinda poopy?”

“You know what I mean. Sarcastic. Secretive. The whole bit.”

“Yeah, so what.”

“So what!” Monkey Boy hopped up and down on the bed, screeching gibberish. After a few moments, he managed to calm himself and sat again. “I don’t want you to become my enemy, Samantha. This is a war, you know. People are dying every day.”

“I know.” She looked down at her feet. “I don’t feel right anymore.”

Monkey Boy put a hand on her leg. “It’s a scary time, I know. You just gotta control yourself. Make sure you don’t cross the line, ya know?”

“I feel like I can’t control it. I look at myself in the mirror, and I don’t see me anymore. I see a werewolf. Monkey Boy, I—I’m starting to grow hair in really strange places.”

“That’s not something you should be afraid of. It doesn’t mean you’re necessarily going to turn into a werewolf.”

“It doesn’t?”

“No. Even your parents have hair in strange places.”

“I didn’t know that.”

“Well now you do. Do you feel better?”

“Yeah.”

“I’m not going to have to come back and break your head open, am I?”

“No.”

Monkey Boy nodded. “Good. Now I don’t want to leave here today and have your mom call me tomorrow and ask me to come back. Before I go, tell me, do you have any substances in here?”

“No.” Her eyes darted away for a split second.

“You don’t mind if I look around then?”

“Course not.”

Monkey Boy bounced off the bed and rummaged through her drawers, crawled under the bed, and when he approached her closet—

“Don’t!”

Monkey Boy turned around. “What? What do ya have in there?”

“Just things. Personal things. I don’t want you to see.”

“I already went through your underwear drawer. How much more personal could it be?” He flung open the door. And there it was. A penguin dressed in a tuxedo. Sick, sick irony. “No substances, huh?”

“That’s uh—that’s my pet.”

“Sure it is.” He grabbed the penguin and tossed it out the window. He’d call animal control later. “I don’t like when people lie to me.”

“I don’t like when monkeys get all in my business!”

Monkey Boy stared at her.

Samantha broke into tears. “I’m sorry. I didn’t mean….” She wiped her cheeks. “I want to stop. I really do. It’s just so hard.”

“I tried compassion. I tried being a good little monkey. Didn’t do any good. There’s really only one other way I can think of to get that sarcasm off the tip of your tongue.” He reached in his pocket and pulled out the white hunk. “Wash your mouth out with Soapy.”

 

Romanticism

 

Vampires—the worst of all.

They emerged in many forms—mostly boy bands and idol singers. More than anything, vampires feared death. They were obsessed with the idea of being lost in the Abyss. And so they spent their entire lives attempting to become immortal.

To accomplish this, they sucked out the essence of society’s youth. They took children’s souls and replaced them with song. Romanticized fluff. “If you believe in yourself, you can do anything.” “Love is great.” “Oh girl.” “Oh boy.” Blah, blah, blah. All they were doing was setting up kids to be destroyed in the real world.

Another reason he despised them—there were no Georgian vampires. Not marketable enough.

Monkey Boy hated the soul-suckers and he took every chance he got to rid the world of the bastards.

There they were. In the bus.

Monkey Boy paid the taxi driver, climbed out the window, and leapt into the open window of the vampires’ vehicle.

The vampires within screamed and waved their hands about like little girls.

Monkey Boy rushed at them with wooden steaks. T-bones, of course.

They attempted to render Monkey Boy unconscious by singing one of their horrible songs, but Monkey Boy had remembered his earplugs.

“You greedy, greedy monsters.” Monkey Boy stabbed another one. “You don’t care about what you’re doing. You don’t care that your immortality has a cost.” He kicked one in the groin, and ducked, avoiding a punch. “Doctors, scientist, philosophers. They’ll all be forgotten. But you don’t give a damn. It’s all about you, you, you!” He finished the last one off.

Soapy climbed out of his pocket and looked at the mess. “Should I?”

Monkey boy shook his head.

“Why?”

“No matter how many of these bastards I kill, more and more of ’em keep popping up. We’ll dump ’em in the middle of town. Word of warning, so to speak.”

 

Image

 

During dinner, Monkey Boy “accidentally” knocked another plate onto the floor. He liked to watch the General’s face as his perfect little Universe became a chaotic, jagged jumble—even if it was just for a few moments.

The General had to laugh it off, of course. Seeing as the money Monkey Boy brought in made up about ninety-nine percent of the household income.

Renee gave him more mashed potatoes. “So how was your day, Monkey Boy?”

“Same-o, same-o.”

“What about you, Soapy?”

“We cleaned up.” Soapy smirked.

Tommy cleared his throat. “I uh—I have something to tell everybody. It‘s not going to be easy for you to hear.”

The General didn’t look too happy.

Tommy continued. “I might as well just come out and say it.” He took a deep breath. “I’m Georgian.”

Silence devoured the room.

Monkey Boy didn’t like quiet. He liked action. He liked people working things out—and as quickly as possible.

“So—” Monkey Boy wanted to say the words, but he was afraid. He was a public figure and if he said the three words, the world would find out. The world would look down on him, and then he might not get as many jobs, and then he wouldn’t have as much money. But—

Monkey Boy sighed.

—but there were some things more important than what the world thought, and how much money he had.

Monkey Boy stood. “I’m Georgian too.”

And that was the end of that.

 

Break From War

 

This was why he fought the war—why he allowed himself to do terrible, terrible things to terrible, terrible things. Sometimes Monkey Boy wondered if he was just as bad as the monsters he killed.

But when he was here, those thoughts drifted out of his head and disappeared—like spontaneously combusting butterflies.

It was the largest collection of paintings, statues, vases, and other forms of art in the world. And these weren’t normal antiques either. They were famous. People spent years, decades, centuries admiring them. That was why it felt so good to mess them up. Every day, Monkey Boy smeared snot on works of art. Making the art of others, his. He chopped off the heads of Greek gods and replaced them with molds of his own. It was a power trip, but at least Monkey Boy wasn’t afraid to admit it. He liked watching the expressions. People from all over the world came to visit Monkey Boy’s special gallery. They would ooh and ahh, pretending that it didn’t hurt their egos—pretending that it was okay that—during this time of war and suffering—humans would sacrifice art to the highest bidder. Even if it meant selling them to a primate who laughed at the idea of poo in the Mona Lisa’s hair.

Monkey Boy sniffed his most recent acquisition, and decided it would be his new spittoon.

 

Dirty

 

Monkey Boy threw his poo into the toilet.

He washed his hands with Soapy. “How ya doing?”

Soapy waited for Monkey Boy to finish rubbing. “Not so good, Monkey Boy.”

“Why?” He dried his hands.

“Just been thinking. You know, about life.”

Monkey Boy gave a slight nod—faking interest.

Soapy paced back and forth on his soap dish. “The thing is…I’m the symbol of cleanliness, right? And yet, I come into contact with more dirt and goo and scum and grime and muck and glob and dust and—”

Monkey Boy yawned.

“—filth and puss and ooze and gunk and slime—than anything else in the world. Hell, I eat zombies for lunch. So what exactly does that make me, Monkey Boy?”

Monkey Boy shrugged.

Soapy stopped walking and looked at Monkey Boy in the eyes. “Am I, as a person, as an individual…really clean?”

Monkey Boy broke free from the spell of soapy snore-dom he was stuck in. “Uh…interesting thought. But we gotta go, Soapy. You ready for the war today?”

“Yeah. I’m ready.”

 

Agape Walrus

 

There are four recognized subspecies of walri. The Pacific Walrus (Odobenus rosmarus divergens), the Atlantic Walrus (Odobenus rosmarus rosmarus), the Laptev Walrus (Odobenus rosmarus laptevi). And, of course, there’s the rare Agape Walrus (Odobenus rosmarus kevinus).

One such walrus, Kevin L. Donihe, lives high up in the hills of East Tennessee. His diet consists primarily of sculpted tofu, because his best friend, Drippy the Zombie Polar Bear, wakes up every morning to shape the tofu into mollusks, tube worms, and sea cucumbers. Kevin appreciates the effort. So much so, that every morning, Kevin allows the bear to unlock and remove his titanium skullcap. Then, Drippy uses a sterile X-Acto knife to cut a miniscule chunk out of Kevin’s head.

Kevin eats the tofu. Drippy eats the brains.

And this is what scientists like to call a symbiotic relationship.

Scientists use words like symbiotic, because they don’t understand love.

That’s why Kevin invites a sampling of scientists to his tree house for a feast of the heart. And out of the twenty scientists he invites, only seven RSVP. And out of that seven, only three end up attending.

Doctor Bloss (marine biologist), Doctor Ivanova (ethologist) and Mr. Wire (time-travelling cytologist).

But before the guests arrive, Drippy says, “Maybe I should leave.”

“Don’t be ridiculous,” Kevin says.

“I’m not. I just…I’m not like you, Kevin. I don’t have anything to offer humans. Or anyone, really.”

“Don’t say that. You’re such a syrupy-sweet soul, with a huge heart of glimmery gold. I just want to gobble you up like a bowl of lemongrass curry.”

Drippy smiles, a little. “What if they’ve never smelled a zombie before? Won’t my scent makes them throw up everywhere?”

“Don’t worry, Drip-drop. Humans are visual-based creatures, usually. Just drench yourself with cologne, and their senile sniffers will be none the wiser.”

“Well…if they are visual beings, then what if I’m the first zombie they’ve ever seen? What if the sight of me makes them faint?”

“Undead Americans are all the rage in the human world. Everyone sees them in magazines and movies.”

“But those zombies are airbrushed and reconstructed with plastic surgery. I’m hideous!”

Kevin slaps the bear’s back with his flipper. Affectionately. “You’re my lovely little lily. You’re my pretty peachy princess.”

“Stop.”

“You’re my darling doll. My stunning star. My gorgeous gourd.”

Drippy can’t help but grin.

“Will you stay for the party?” Kevin says.

The bear searches through his treasure chest for his bottle of Chanel No. 5. “I’ll stay.”

So, hours later, Drippy presents the humans with a platter of tofu burgers, tofu fries, and tofu apple tofu pie.

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