Archive for January, 2011

NETHERMEAD: By A.J. Sweeney

Tuesday, January 25th, 2011

She couldn’t put her finger on it but something felt wrong.

She’d been walking for what seemed like hours, though she couldn’t tell for sure.  She looked at her phone: no reception.  She had no watch.

It was a cool, misty evening in late winter, almost spring, and it had still been light out when she got home from work.  It had seemed a shame to shut herself inside and watch TV, so she put on her boots and walked to the park.

She wandered through the muddy meadows and naked trees, feeling herself relax almost immediately, slipping into a meditative state as she rounded the still, gray pond.  If there was one thing she was good at, it was emptying her mind.  She once took a yoga class and sat
there in guilty silence when the instructor lamented how difficult it was to get your mind really empty.

She worked as a dispatcher for a shipping company, meaning she assigned one thing from one person to be moved from one place to another place by another person.  After five years of dull routine, she began to feel a generalized lull taking hold of her mind.

It wasn’t unpleasant.  It allowed her to field calls from angry customers with robotic detachment, and go through the motions on her long, routine-filled weekends.  No, truly there was nothing wrong with the mellow emptiness she allowed herself to feel, but things became
problematic when the mellowness gave way to carelessness and forgetfulness.

She often felt a vague, foggy feeling that she was forgetting something but she couldn’t remember what it was.  This feeling nagged her now as she plodded through the park.  “Am I late to meet someone? Not likely.  More likely I’m forgetting something….”

She continued on her way, letting the sound of burbling water relax her as she walked nearer to the bridge and brook.  She heard the murmuring grow louder in the distance and realized it was the ravings of a homeless schizophrenic who trod back and forth on the bridge.
She changed course without breaking stride.  “I’ll go over by the hill instead,” she said to herself.

There were a number of steep hills in the park, and now she rounded the base of the tallest of these, Lookout Hill, which ended its western vista quite abruptly over a stony cataract of loose shale and jagged boulders.  The meadow beyond was called Nethermead.  Past this
she strolled, letting the sound of birdsong drown out the schizophrenic man as he shouted about Jesus.

The night was getting dark and damp; the lamp-lights would be coming on soon.  Her eyes were having trouble discerning the four dusky shapes coming at her in the distance.  Four youths, all male, on the path coming toward her.  She felt herself stiffen slightly and held
her breath a little as they got nearer.

One of them said, “The hours are a good – ”

His friend interrupted.  “Better than the ER?”

“Way better.  The hours at the ER were brutal.”

And she realized these four young men were doctors, or perhaps medical students.  She laughed a little and felt herself relax again.

The park had become very still and quiet.  A strange, not-unpleasant fatigue, a blissful sensation, washed warmly over her; she felt as though she were almost falling asleep, as though she could lie down and take a nap right there on the ground.

Her mind was so befogged, she was unaware of a lone man walking about twelve feet behind her.  He caught up to her quickly with his long strides and she started a little as he walked beside her, his pace to hers.  “Are you going home now?” he asked in awkward, accented
English.  He was smiling. “Yes, I’m going home now,” she answered.  He smiled again and nodded.  “Okay.”  And he walked away in the direction from which he’d come.

She began to feel a vague sense of unease.

“Have I forgotten something?  Am I late to meet someone?  Not likely. More likely I’m forgetting something….”

The fog, so charming moments ago, now seemed impenetrable.  Twilight caused solid shapes to shift.  She walked down one path only to realize she was going in the opposite direction she’d intended.  She turned around, only to come round the bend and end up where she
started.

“I’ve been here before…”

She wondered absently if she was losing her mind.  She had been making more mistakes at work than usual, pressing the wrong button here, entering the wrong data code there.

Now a dreadful shiver ran through her.  Though it was definitely dark, the lamp-lights hadn’t come on.  Another oddity: she hadn’t seen another soul since the strange man in the woods.  But strangest of all was the birdsong: it had disappeared completely.  All was completely
and utterly silent and still.

Steadily she walked, slowly yielding to the sense of inevitability that was spreading over her.  And then at last, she saw a landmark, something distinct from the seemingly endless spiral of pathways and trees: Lookout Hill.

Automatically, she walked toward it and up the zig-zagging paths that circumscribed its steep sides.  Back and forth until she reached the top.  The fog and mist were such that it took her a moment to register what she saw when she looked down.  It was SHE, walking on the path
below.  She mused for a moment, gazing down at herself.

She picked up a large rock with both hands and threw it down on her head.  Her body below crumpled.

Now her mind felt clear, alert.  She felt more lucid than she had in ages.

“That’s better,” she said.

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©2011 A. J Sweeney

A.J. Sweeney lives in Brooklyn, N.Y., across the street from a cemetery and a high-voltage ConEd substation, and hopes that one day this combination will result in some zombie
action.  She blogs at
http://bourbonandtea.blogspot.com.

PYGG: By Charles Mirho

Monday, January 24th, 2011

“Its watching me,” said little Sam, pointing through the window at the inflatable pig-faced inner tube floating in the pool.
 
“What is?” his mother asked while washing dishes.
 
Sammy said, “Pygg.”
 
She looked out the window toward the pool. “That’s not a pig. It’s a plastic tube. Do you want to play in the pool?”
 
“No! It’ll get me!” The boy shut his  eyes and clamped his arms around his mother’s legs.
 
“Don’t be ridiculous. It’s just a toy. It can’t hurt you. Go to your room.” The boy slumped off down the hall and into his room.
 
“That child,” muttered his mother. It was of course mere projection. She often called little Sammy a “pig” when he made a mess at meals or in his room. Harmless, and necessary to instill discipline. Outside the plastic tube turned slow circles in the pool.
 
Moments later a scream split the silence. Sam’s mom dropped the glass she was cleaning and it shattered on the floor. She ran down the hallway toward the sound.
 
Sam huddled in a corner by the bed in his room.  “Pygg!” He pointed to a blue plastic piggy bank on his dresser.
 
She yanked him to his feet by the arm. “I’ve had about enough of this pig business! The only little piggy in this house is you.” She pulled him out of the room and down the hall. “We’re going to a barbeque and I need to get ready. Not one more word about pigs!”
 
Sam waited in the hall while his mother put on makeup. Twenty minutes later they were driving to the barbeque. Small for his age and still in a carseat, Sam stared out the window as they merged with traffic on the highway. A billboard advertising car insurance appeared on the right. On the billboard a smiling purple pig exhorted drivers to “save 20% on their car insurance RIGHT NOW’.
 
“Pygg!!” Sam screamed, causing his mother to jerk the wheel. A cacophony of squealing brakes and enraged horns ensued before she straightened the car.
 
Furious and frightened she shouted, “Are you trying to get us both killed? You little pig, what is wrong with you lately?”
 
The boy sobbed but otherwise stayed silent for the remainder of the ride.  His mother wondered what to do about him. He had been acting out ever since his father had left. Last spring it was a fear of dogs. Then it was an inexplicable fear of the refrigerator. His counselor believed the phobias stemmed from a deep rooted fear of loss and separation.
 
Sure she was hard on the boy, but he had to learn to be tough. She had enough on her plate without the burden of an insecure whining child. Besides, his irrational fears were contagious. For a split second, as they had passed the billboard, she had felt the eyes of the purple pig follow the car. Nonsense, of course. The boy’s weirdness was rubbing off on her, was all.
 
They arrived at the barbeque. She parked, turned, and said, “I’m going to a party in back of this house. I was going to bring you, but I changed my mind. You are going to stay here in the car and take a nap while I go to the party.”
 
Eyes red from crying, Sam nodded without a word. He seemed relieved.
 
She locked the car and walked around back of the house. A high wooden fence and gate surrounded the back yard. She went through the gate. Dozens of people were gathered in the yard behind the house, around a fire pit. Over the fire a pig turned slowly on a spit.
 
Good thing I left Sam in the car, she thought, eyeing the roasting pig. He would have freaked out for sure. She waded into the crowd. Two martinis and ten minutes later, she was dancing by the fire like a Vegas pro. A couple drinks later she was still dancing. She felt like she was moving underwater.
 
She looked over at the fire pit. The roasting pig on the spit turned its head toward her.
 
She screamed and tripped and spilled her drink on the guy next to her. He called her a name. She looked back at the pig. Blood oozed from its white dead eyes. Its skin peeled off in black flakes. Not moving. Dead. She shivered and tried to stand.
 
Suddenly people were running everywhere. They were piling into the high wooden gate like spectators fleeing a burning movie theater. The gate wouldn’t open so they tried to climb the high fence. It was total panic. They were trying to climb out of the yard but some force kept shocking them off the fence, and they fell back into the yard.
 
She turned back toward the pit.
 
The pig came walking toward her out of the fire, heat-polished fangs protruding from lips peeled back in a sickening black grin, bleeding white eyes aglow with lust and rage and hunger, blue electric bolts arcing from its body toward the fence.
 
Pygg.
 
In the car, a very special boy slept and dreamed his terrible projections as screams split the suburban calm and bodies slammed the fence and gouts of blood sprayed high into the summer sky.

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©2011 Charles Mirho