The Shadows, Kith and Kin (3 page)

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Authors: Joe R. Lansdale

BOOK: The Shadows, Kith and Kin
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It's easy.

 

On the other side of the door I use the dolly itself to push up under the door handle, and it freezes the door. It'll take some work to shake that loose.

 

––

 

There's one more flight inside the tower.

 

I have to drag the trunk of guns.

 

Hard work. The rope handle on the crate snaps and the guns slide all the way back down.

 

I push them up.

 

I almost think I can't make it. The trunk is so heavy. So many guns. And all that sweet ammunition.

 

––

 

Finally, to the top, shoving with my shoulder, bending my legs all the way.

 

The door up there is not locked, the one that leads outside to the runway around the clock tower.

 

I walk out, leaving the trunk. I walk all around the tower and look down at all the small things there.

 

Soon the light will come, and so will the people.

 

Turning, I look up at the huge clock hands. Four o'clock.

 

I hope time does not slip. I do not want to find myself at home by the window, looking out.

 

The shadows.

 

They flutter.

 

They twist.

 

The runway is full of them, thick as all the world's lost ones. Thick as all the world's hopeless. Thick, thick, thick, and thicker yet to be. When I join them.

 

––

 

There is one fine spot at the corner of the tower runway. That is where I should begin.

 

I place a rifle there, the one I used to put my family and dog asleep.

 

I place rifles all around the tower.

 

I will probably run from one station to the other.

 

The shadows make suggestions.

 

All good, of course.

 

I put a revolver in my belt.

 

I put a shotgun near the entrance to the runway, hidden behind the edge of the tower, in a little outcrop of artful bricks. It tucks in there nicely.

 

There are huge flowerpots stuffed with ferns all about the runway. I stick pistols in the pots.

 

When I finish, I look at the clock again.

 

An hour has passed.

 

––

 

Back home in my chair, looking out the window at the dying night. Back home in my chair, the smell of my family growing familiar, like a shirt worn too many days in a row.

 

Like the one I have on. Like the thick coat I wear.

 

I look out the window and it is not the window, but the little split in the runway barrier. There are splits all around the runway wall.

 

I turn to study the place I have chosen and find myself looking out my window at home, and as I stare, the window melts and so does the house.

 

The smell.

 

That does not go with the window and the house.

 

The smell stays with me.

 

The shadows are way too close. I am nearly smothered. I can hardly breathe.

 

––

 

Light cracks along the top of the tower and falls through the campus trees and runs along the ground like spilt warm honey.

 

I clutch my coat together, pull it tight. It is very cold. I can hardly feel my legs.

 

––

 

I get up and walk about the runway twice, checking on all my guns.

 

Well-oiled. Fully loaded.

 

Full of hot-lead announcements.

 

Telegram: You're dead.

 

––

 

Back at my spot, the one from which I will begin, I can see movement. The day has started. I poke the rifle through the break in the barrier and bead down on a tall man walking across campus.

 

I could take him easy.

 

But I do not.

 

Wait, say the shadows. Wait until the little world below is full.

 

––

 

The hands on the clock are loud when they move, they sound like the machinery I can hear in my head. Creaking and clanking and moving along.

 

The air had turned surprisingly warm.

 

I feel so hot in my jacket.

 

I take it off.

 

I am sweating.

 

The day has come but the shadows stay with me.

 

True friends are like that. They don't desert you.

 

It's nice to have true friends.

 

It's nice to have with me the ones who love me.

 

It's nice to not be judged.

 

It's nice to know I know what to do and the shadows know too, and we are all the better for it.

 

––

 

The campus is alive.

 

People swim across the concrete walks like minnows in the narrows.

 

Minnows everywhere in their new sharp clothes, ready to take their tests and do their papers and meet each other so they might screw. All of them, with futures.

 

But I am the future-stealing machine.

 

––

 

I remember once, when I was a child, I went fishing with minnows. Stuck them on the hooks and dropped them in the wet. When the day was done, I had caught nothing. I violated the fisherman's code. I did not pour the remaining minnows into the water to give them their freedom. I poured them on the ground.

 

And stomped them.

 

I was in control.

 

––

 

A young, beautiful girl, probably eighteen, tall like a model, walking like a dream, is moving across the campus. The light is on her hair and it looks very blonde, like my wife's.

 

I draw a bead.

 

The shadows gather. They whisper. They touch. They show me their faces.

 

They have faces now.

 

Simple faces.

 

Like mine.

 

I trace my eye down the length of the barrel.

 

Without me really knowing it, the gun snaps sharp in the morning light.

 

The young woman falls amidst a burst of what looks like plum jelly.

 

The minnows flutter. The minnows flee.

 

But there are so many, and they are panicked. Like they have been poured on the ground to squirm and gasp in the dry.

 

I begin to fire. Shot after shot after shot.

 

Each snap of the rifle a stomp of my foot.

 

Down they go.

 

Squashed.

 

I have no hat, father-in-law, and I am full of manliness.

 

––

 

The day goes up hot.

 

Who would have thunk?

 

I have moved from one end of the tower to the other.

 

I have dropped many of them.

 

The cops have come.

 

I have dropped many of them.

 

I hear noise in the tower.

 

I think they have shook the dolly loose.

 

The door to the runway bursts open.

 

A lady cop steps through. My first shot takes her in the throat. But she snaps one off at about the same time. A revolver shot. It hits next to me where I crouch low against the runway wall.

 

Another cop comes through the door. I fire and miss.

 

My first miss.

 

He fires. I feel something hot inside my shoulder.

 

I find that I am slipping down, my back against the runway wall. I can't hold the rifle. I try to drag the pistol from my belt, but can't. My arm is dead. The other one, well, it's no good either. The shot has cut something apart inside of me. The strings to my limbs. My puppet won't work.

 

Another cop has appeared. He has a shotgun. He leans over me. His teeth are gritted and his eyes are wet.

 

And just as he fires, the shadows say:

 

Now, you are one of us.

 

"The Shadows, Kith and Kin" originally appeared in Outsiders: 22 All-New Stories from the Edge (Roc, 2005). It was later collected in The Shadows, Kith and Kin (Subterranean Press, 2007).

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