'Til Death Do Us Part (11 page)

BOOK: 'Til Death Do Us Part
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Roll up your window,

Gary asked BT as he shivered.

 

CHAPT
E
R FIVE

M
ike
J
ournal
E
ntry 2

 

The sound of a small engine car racing past the house awoke me from m
y daze, that and the crazy, long-
haired bastard that was looking down at me.


Are you real?

h
e asked.


Where the fuck am I?

I asked as I was peering around the room that was covered from floor to ceiling and the ceiling itself in tin foil.


Hey...hey...hey!

h
e started.

I

m asking the hyperboles!

So I know my grasp of the English language is suspect at best, but even I knew that was an incorrect sentence.


Ask away,

I said weakly. I felt marginally better than I had when I fell into the house, but how much better
was still in question. If crazy-eyed, long-
haired
,
bearded man attacked right now with more than a plastic spoon I would be done for.


I

m asking the questions here,

h
e said
,
trying to establish his authority.


You said you were asking the hyperboles?


Why the fuck would I say that?
That makes absolutely no sense,

h
e said
,
scratching his head.

Why you here? Did they send you?


Can I get a drink first?

I asked, my throat felt like it was on fire, which I guess wasn

t
t
o
o
far removed from the truth.


I dance on my bed.

How do these people find me? It

s like I have a heavy dose of crazy attractant sprayed all over me.

That

s nice,

w
as all I could think to say in return.


Scotch okay? I don

t drink water since the government started putting fl
uoride in it. It makes you dumb,

h
e said
,
tapping his finger against his head.


So how much water did you drink before you realized
that?

I asked him.

Bearded M
an was already heading into the
kitchen;
I think he was muttering something about Kelly Clarkson. I could hear the rattle of glasses and then a few of them smashing.


You alright?

I asked as I tried to sit up.


Thought I saw bugs,

c
ame his reply.


What

s with the tin foil?


What tin foil?

h
e said as he came back into the room holding two large glasses filled to the top with an amber colored liquid I could only hope was scotch and not Pine-Sol.


Need some help?

h
e asked as he put the glasses down and extended his hand.

I was grateful for the help
,
but was afraid to touch him lest my burned flesh slough off in his grip.


Come on
,
man, I haven

t bitten anyone since that one time in the K-Mart parking lot
,
and I thought he was an alligator
,

h
e said
,
seeing my hesitation.

“I’m kind of burned bad, and I’m not sure if my skin will stay on.”


You

r
e
funny
,
man! You

re dirty as hell
,
I

ll give you that
,
but you ain

t burned. I mean I thought you were when you came in, but the more I looked at you the more convinced I was you were just a dirty bastard.

I looked down at my hands.
There
seemed to be some residual burn marks
,
but it was nothing like what
I
had been looking at when I was in the roadway.
I winced as
he grabbed my hand, still half-
convinced he would fall backwards with a fair portion of human material stuck in his grasp. My body popped and snapped as I stood, but I felt like a caterpillar shedding its old cocoon and becoming a butterfly. O
kay…
so that really isn

t a manly enough metaphor, let

s go with a snake shedding its old skin, that works much better and probably a lot closer to the truth considering what I was now. Half, half of what I am. I had to hold onto that other half with everything I had now.
I picked up my glass and took a large swallow, the liquid alternating between burning and soothing my throat.


How did the government know I was here?

Bearded M
an asked.

I gripped the edge of a small table as a serious case of vertigo swooned by me.

Whoa, cheap high,

I said
,
harkening back to a reference I had used since my youth whenever I got
light-
headed from rising too quickly.


There is nothing cheap about my high
s,

Bearded M
an said indignantly.

I thought I had crazy cornered, shit was I wrong.
“No one sent me, definitely not the government. I was trying to get away.”


From her?

h
e asked.

The swoon struck again, I tried not to let him see it.

T
hen he moved on.

I once ate a Snickers bar on a dare.

Who the hell doesn

t like Snickers bars?
I thought
,
and who would

dare

someone to
eat
one
?


Can we start again?

I asked.


When did we finish?

h
e asked back.

How many gods have I pissed off?
I wailed internally.


My name is Michael Talbot,

I said as I extended my hand
,
thinking he would shake it
,
then tell me his name. He looked at my proffered hand like it was a claw.


No way
,
man
,

h
e said.

I understood not shaking hands;
he could be a fellow germaphobe.
But that didn

t make any sense considering that
he had just helped me to stand.


Okay,

I said
,
pulling my hand back in, unconsciously rubbing it against my side. Blue jean material fell way like dried s
and. I began to brush my legs. M
ore fried clothing fell to the ground.


Dude
,
you

re messing with my high man,

Bearded
Man
said as he backed up.

I stopped what I was doing
,
realizing that if I kept it up I would be naked in front of another man
real soon
. (Not that there

s anything wrong with that, it just isn

t my cup of tea.
O
kay
,
so tea doesn

t seem masculine enough, let

s go with lager, yeah it

s not my stein of lager, much better).


Are you melting?

h
e asked
,
still backing up.


Molting more like it.

I gulped down my apprehension as I began to ask him my next question.

Do you have any clothes I could borrow?

As it was
,
I had to wash store bought clothes twice before I would ever wear them
,
and now I was asking this unkempt stranger if I could borrow some of his stuff.

His eyes glazed for half a second then some lucidity popped in for a quick respite.

Sure I

ll be right back.

What the fuck?
I mouthed
. This guy was insane…
I was just hoping not
criminally
insane. I can deal with varying degrees
of insanity;
I

m a Talbot after all.

He came back a few moments later with a heavy woolen poncho
, w
hite socks with yellow stripes—
I hadn

t seen anything
like those since grade school—a
pair of pants that looked fashionable during the Nixon era
,
and some t
ightie-
whities.

I gladly accepted just about
everything except the underwear.
They
could have been brand new
,
but the mere fact that he had touched them
made them
soiled in my eyes. And these were far from Inspector Number 5

s hands
;
the elastic waistband was all stretched and worn out and there was a small hole in the seat.


I was going to toss those soon,

h
e said as he watched me looking at the underwear.


Well I

m glad you found it in your heart to hold onto them until you bequeathed them
to
me.


You

re welcome, want some french fries?


Thank you and yes.

What the hell else could I say? Who turns down french fries? Plus
,
I thought it would give me an opportunity to stash the underwear while he went into the other room to gather the mythical fried spuds.

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