Read Mark Henry_Amanda Feral 02 Online
Authors: Road Trip of the Living Dead
Tags: #Vampires, #Horror, #Contemporary, #General, #Romance, #Fantasy, #Supernatural, #Zombies, #Fiction, #Occult & Supernatural, #Paranormal
“Well, you know what they say. Russian is the new Latin Fusion.” I stood up and sauntered to the car, hips swiveling like a salsa dancer.
169
“Dinnertime.” Honey sang the word in a light jazzy breath and followed Wendy.
Our duo of super sexy undead glamour killers was a trio, now, like Destiny’s Child, or the Supremes, except with sharper teeth and healthier appetites.
166
Oh yeah, I bumped up. How could I not, really, what with my fascination with Hitchcock heroines? Go look this little number up on the internet; it’s to die. Plus, it goes
too
well with McQueen’s black tulip skirt. Sexiness!
167
The reaper’s medicine cabinet was a tad unconventional and um, gross.
168
And between you and me, I can’t find a single one that is clip-worthy for one of my memoirs. I’m rewriting her ad copy myself. She’s just not that interested. Now a club opening or a trunk sale at Barney’s, she’s all over that like fleas on a dog.
169
Do I need to say, it caught his eye?
They said I’d rot before I got out a second memoir. Said I didn’t have it in me. Who’s they, you ask? The press. My mother. Those idiots at the
Supernatural Seattle
, who should know I took the review for
Happy Hour
and wiped my ass with it. I’m talking to you, Meredith Martin, you might remember a certain stink coming from your in-box. All me. I ate some cake special for you.
Oh yeah.
And you high and mighty literary critics, do you remember those free pizzas that showed up during the elections? Guess what? They had a special topping on ’em.
I proved the bastards wrong, anyway.
Road Trip
was a living hell to put to paper, and this time, the only person worth thanking is myself.
So thank you, me.
Good job!
Please turn the page for an exciting sneak peek of
Mark Henry’s
BATTLE OF THE NETWORK ZOMBIES,
now on sale!
Saturday
2–2:30 A.M.
C
H
. SS12
Tapping Birch’s Syrup
The remaining “ladies” share a group date with Birch and another challenge: create evening gowns with the local flora … poison ivy! Plus, Lu-divine reveals a secret deformity.
Its official name was the H & C Gentleman’s Club— that’s what it said on the tax statement, at least, and in the phone book—but everyone in Seattle knew it as the Hooch and Cooch, the Northwest’s first hillbilly-themed titty bar, and it certainly lived up to its backwoods inspirations. The exterior was dilapidated, a hodgepodge of boards nailed up at weird angles and
intervals as siding, while rust from the corrugated-metal roof striped the building a gritty orange. It clung to the hillside above Fremont on pilings so rickety, the slightest bump threatened to dump the shack’s smutty guts onto the quiet neighborhood underneath.
I’d applaud the audacity, if the owner weren’t Ethel Ellen Frazier, vampire, mega-bitch, and, worst of all, my mother.
I considered leaving the car idling in the space—a sound getaway plan was looking like my best option— then fished out my cell and hammered in Marithé’s number.
“Seriously?” I asked the second she picked up, fondling the address she’d written on the back of my business card.
“What?” My assistant’s voice always sounds annoyed, so it’s difficult to assess her tone. A good rule of thumb is just to assume I’ve interrupted something very important like saving time in a bottle, writing the great American novel, or ending the plague that is zombie crotch rot—more likely, at that hour, she’d be using the Wite-Out to create a budget French manicure.
“The Hooch and Cooch? Since when is one of my mother’s strip clubs an appropriate meeting place?” My eyes took in the stories-tall cowgirl on the roof, lit up old school—in light bulbs rather than neon. Several were burnt out, but most notable were the cowgirl’s front teeth; on closer inspection, those seemed to be blacked out on purpose—it’s nice to see an attention to authentic detail. The ten-foot-tall flashing pink beaver between her legs was a subtle choice, if I do say so.
“He insisted,” she said, her voice echoing on the speakerphone.
“Fucking pig.”
The pig’s name was Johnny Birch, and he was famous
for three things: crooning jazz standards like that Bublé or Bubble guy or whoever, screwing anything with a hole (including donuts), and doing it all publicly on his own reality show,
Tapping Birch’s Syrup
(shown exclusively on channel SS12). He was also a wood nymph, but even though that’s all ethereal and earthy, it’s really secondary to the pervert stuff. Apparently he had a proposition and from the look of the Hooch and Cooch, I had a pretty good idea it wasn’t business related.
“Seriously, this better be a for real deal or I’m gonna be one pissed-off zombie.”
“Karkaroff was very specific that this was a
priority
meeting.” I could imagine her making air quotes in the cushy office chair, leaning back with her ankles crossed on the desk admiring her trophy shoes.
My business partner was already fuming from our recent clusterfuck with Necrophilique. How was I supposed to know the fecal content of the cosmetics? Do I look like a chemist? Still, we needed the money after word spread and the launch tanked. What was the saying, beggars can’t be choosers? Not that I was a beggar by any count, but … shit, Mama’s got bills to pay.
“Fine.” I gripped the phone to my ear as she yammered on about her day and I started loading my purse with all the important undead accoutrements. Flesh-tone bandages (you never know when you’ll get a scratch, and humans are normally surprised when they don’t see blood seeping), cigarettes (why the hell not) and lastly, Altoids, of course, because dragon breath doesn’t even begin to describe the smell that escapes up this rotten esophagus.
I did take a moment to wonder if I was dressed appropriately for the venue. The Gucci skirt was definitely fitted and might draw some roving hands, but I
could certainly handle those. My big concern was the white silk blouse.
It was Miu Miu, for Christ’s sake.
The Hooch and Cooch didn’t look like the kind of place that any white fabric could escape without a stain, let alone designer silk.
As if on cue, two drunken slobs slammed out of the swinging doors and scattered out onto the red carpet-less cement.
1
One landed on his ass with his legs spread, an expanding dark wetness spread from his crotch outward. His buddy clutched at his stomach in a silent fit of laughter, but then fell against a truck and puked into the open bed. The rest dribbled off his chin and down his loosened tie as he slid to the concrete. I guess that answered my question about fashion choices. Pretty much anything will do if your competition is piss and puke stains, though clearly the blouse was in danger and the stains were much more dubious than I’d imagined.
“Ugh. Christ. Call me in ten minutes. I know I’m going to need an excuse to get out of here.”
I stuffed the phone in my Alexander McQueen red patent Novak bag—yes, you need to know that, if for no other reason than to understand that I’ve moved on from the Balenciaga; it’s a metaphor for my personal growth—and headed in, stepping over the passed-out figure on the threshold. The urine smell was unbearable. Someone had enjoyed a nutritious meal of asparagus.
2
I shoved the splintery doors into the strip club’s lobby and was greeted by a wall of
palsied antlers, Molly Hatchet blaring some ′70s bullshit, and my mother’s pasty dead face beaming from behind the hostess stand.
“Darling.” She crossed the room in three strides, cowboy boots crunching on the peanut shells coating the floor and arms reaching—the effect was more praying mantis than loving mother, I assure you. “You should have called.”
I submitted to a hug and, over her shoulder, caught a glimpse of Gil, arms crossed and leaning on the open bed of a Ford F-150 that seemed to have been repurposed as the gift shop—how they got it in there, I have no clue. A pair of those ridiculous metal balls dangled between his legs from the trailer hitch behind him. I couldn’t help but giggle. He tipped his Stetson in my direction and winked.
“You’re right, Mother. I’ll definitely call next time.”
3
She pulled away, concern spreading across her face. The vamping achieved the kind of freshening a top-dollar Beverly Hills facelift aimed for, but no amount of magic could revive Ethel’s sincerity.
“It’s just, we haven’t had a whole lot of time to sort out this … tension between us, and I’d like us to be a family, again.”
Again. Just like that. Like there’d ever been anything remotely resembling a “family.” Unless her definition of family was the people one ridiculed, judged, and rejected, then yeah, I guess we had a “family.”
I clenched my fists. If blood flowed through my veins rather than thick yellow goo, I might have turned beet red. But instead of appearing angry, I took on a sickly jaundice, which is never cute.
I decided to stuff it and pushed past her to find Johnny Birch. “Sure, Ethel, let’s work on that.”
“I don’t appreciate your sarcasm.” She sang the final word, as she did when pretending something didn’t actually bother her. I grinned, triumphant.
I bounded up to Gil. “How do you put up with that bitch?” I stabbed a thumb in Ethel’s direction.
“Who, your mother? Oh please, she’s wonderful to work for and so funny …”
His voice trailed off, replaced by the twangin’ guitar of Southern rock. Mother had obviously brainwashed Gil to spout this pro-Ethel propaganda, and I wasn’t about to listen to it. “Yeah. Yeah. Awesome. A real peach.”
“A better question is, how do I put up with this seventies ass rock.”
The music changed. “Slow Ride,” by Foghat. “Seriously. What’s the deal?” I asked.
“Part of your mom’s plan; it’s all she’ll play here. She says seventies rock forces guys to buy beer. Something in their genes. Oh … and look at this.” Gil reached into the truck bed, which was lined with various Hooch and Cooch promo items, T-shirts, CDs, pocket pussies—that sort of thing—and retrieved a DVD. A sleazy, greasy-haired dancer grinned from the cover, one of her front teeth was missing, and she wore a wife-beater that didn’t do a good job hiding the fact that her boob job looked like two doorknobs. It read: Learn to Strip with the Girls of the Hooch and Cooch (see inset).
“Jesus. Like one of those Carmen Electra striptease workouts?”
“Yep.” He tossed it back in the truck. “Sells like hotcakes.”
“I bet.”
Music from the DVD …
Learn to Strip with the Girls of the Hooch and Cooch
*
Thin Lizzy • “Jailbreak”
Foghat • “Slow Ride”
Heart • “Barracuda”
Ted Nugent • “Cat Scratch Fever”
War • “Low Rider”
Nazareth • “Hair of the Dog”
The Runaways • “Cherry Bomb”
Blue Oyster Cult • “Burnin’ for
You” Kansas • “Carry on Wayward
Son” Boston • “More Than a Feeling”
*
for instructional purposes only!
I looked past Gil into the club for the first time and witnessed the horrors of uncontrolled testosterone production. A drunken mass of homely men and a few semi-doable ones, surprisingly, crowded around two spotlit islands, shouting obscenities and waving dollar bills. It was nearly impossible to distinguish them as individuals; they’d reverted to some sort of quivering gelatinous state. A few appeared near death, eyes rolling in the back of their heads as though they’d never seen a used-up hooker—I mean, nude woman—writhing in a metal washtub, scrubbing herself with a moldy bath brush and kicking suds off dirty feet at her sweaty admirers. Maybe it’s because we were indoors.
Between the two performance spaces—though really I’m being overly generous with that description
—was a large shack built into the back of the club complete with everything you’d expect to find in the backwoods of the Ozarks, or in a typical Northwest suburb, for that matter—a covered porch, rocking chairs, even a butter churn.
4
Everything, that is, but a little inbred blind kid playing the banjo and showing off the graveyard of teeth in his mouth.
He must have been on a smoke break.
Booths lined the edges of the room, where hillbilly chicks chatted up customers under the watchful glass eyes of various stuffed animal heads. Fog lights on truck grills jutted from the walls lighting up the tables and the assorted (or sordid) activities taking place there.
“This place is a regular Rainforest Café. Only instead of cute plastic animals, you’ve got dirty whores.”
“Absolutely.” Gil crossed his arms and beamed, as proud as a new father—sure, he had a stake in the place, but he was overdoing the satisfaction considering the place reeked of bleach and I’m pretty sure it wasn’t emanating from a big load of laundry.
5
“Pays the bills,” he said.
“Listen. I’m supposed to be meeting a guy. Johnny Birch, that fame whore from TV. Have you seen him?”
“Um.” He scanned the room. “Totally. What a freak. I think he’s just finished up with Kelsey.” Gil pointed to a hallway flanked by two columns of chicken coups. A lanky, dark-haired man emerged with a jug of moonshine in one hand and a skanky redhead in the other.
“Christ.”
The guy was tonguing the girl’s ear as I approached.
“Excuse me,” I said. “Are you Mr. Birch?”
He spun the girl away like a Frisbee, absolutely no regard for where she might land. She twirled a few times, collapsed in some other perv’s lap, and started gyrating. Birch measured me in long, sweeping stares. Head to toe, lingering on the tits and back to the head. “Sure am.” He extended his hand. “And you’re Amanda. Lovely to meet you.”
He pulled at my hand as though planning to pull off a gentlemanly knuckle kiss, but I snatched it back, wishing for a Clorox wipe. “Yeah. Um, you have some sort of business proposition, I’ve been told. Do you want to talk about that here, or do you have a table somewhere? Maybe a private booth they reserve for regulars.”