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"Russel" (standard:Psychological fiction, 2944 words) | |||
Author: Straybullet | Added: May 11 2007 | Views/Reads: 3566/2440 | Story vote: 0.00 (0 votes) |
Visit your grandmother damn it! | |||
Click here to read the first 75 lines of the story Russell. Goddamned if he wasn't tired of hearing about Russell. Mark tuned her out and sank into his own thoughts inevitably hitting upon a one that had been living within him since he'd first met Alice. Mark hadn't reached such a state of depravity to rob anyone yet, but his need has been growing and he hurt constantly. Salvation could be a helpless elderly lady hording a bunch valuable antiques...Mark sidestepped the thought. Best not to think of it. She stopped again midway up the back stairs leading up from the alley. So involved into blocking her out with his own thoughts that Mark nearly ran into her. "Have you gotten those bug bites checked out yet?" It took a few minutes as it often did to piece together just what in the Hell she'd been talking about. Slowly Mark looked at his forearm. He'd told her they were bug bites out of a mixture of shame and the fact that he didn't want her to know where her social security check was going. "Um no Alice I haven't yet." "Well you should you know. Russell and I were watching ‘Twenty/twenty' last night...wait maybe it was Monday night. That's it! It was Monday night after football. He still likes his football. Twenty/twenty had a documentary on about this spider, a brown recluse spider they called it. Nasty thing. Anyway, this poor little six year old..." "Ummm. Alice." he said indicating the armload of groceries he'd been lugging. "Oh!" She exclaimed. “I'm so sorry Mark your poor arms must be getting tired.” She fished her keys from her purse and returned to the stairs and the rest of the Monday night broadcast of “Twenty/twenty”. “Helloooo Russel!” Alice called to one of the other rooms. Russell didn't answer nor had he ever since Mark had been coming. He set the bag down on the kitchen table as Alice tended to her cats. There were only three of them but the small two-bed apartment reeked like there were fifty of them. A calico wound its way around Alice's legs as she dug two small cans of tuna from the bags and fed them. Mark looked over the room. The flower patterned floor, the beige walls speckled with age stained pictures of Russell and Alice. Alice's dress and hairstyle changed throughout these pictures with no two alike while Russell simply wore a collar shirt and jacket. Always the same jacket and in later color photographs it was found out to be tan. "W-where's your bathroom Alice?" he spoke through a bout of shakes. She pointed him to a room down a hall decorated with even more of the same pictures. As he stood relieving himself, a thought occurred to him. The refrigerator door is bare. That meant no family. He sifted his memory, had there been any children or any grandchildren in the pictures? No. It was just Russell. "God that must be lonely." He muttered. Mark felt some empathy for the old woman; after all he knew what it was like to be lonely. Hunched against one building or another with a scrawled cardboard sign all the while your fellow man files past you by the hundreds seeing but pretending not to see you. That was lonely. His eyes pinched as another wave of shakes racked him accidentally causing him to piss on the floor. "Awww Fuck!" came out before Mark could stop it. A grandfather clock announced the time from one of the other rooms and immediately he tried to tally how much he could get for it followed by how hard something like that would be to get down two flights of stairs. Mark shook his head as if to dispel the thought. She collected clocks she'd told him more than once; she had over thirty in fact many from different parts of the world. All set ten minutes fast so that the hourly chimes didn't interfere with the first few minutes of the news. Funny the odd shit you remember. After washing up a bit he headed back to the kitchen where he told her he'd see her next week and went to leave. Alice told him that she was cleaning out some garbage, quite a bit in fact and that she'd need him to carry it out for her next week. She also said she'd pay him thirty dollars extra for doing it. 2 A week of blurry days passed without consequence and routine once again, found Mark standing outside the door of the Superfresh shaking, hungry and anxious. Fifty dollars and not just that, he was going to get a peak at some of the junk the old broad was throwing out. It was probably just piles of newspapers that old people like to hang onto, but who knows. The shaking was really bad today, he couldn't keep still so he scratched and scratched. The shirt he'd found had already started to itch and he figured he'd have to get rid of it soon. Desperation is an insistent beast. He was looking over the rawness of his arm when Alice came out carrying a single blue plastic bag that she could easily manage by herself. For a minute he was worried she'd dismiss him. She saw him nodded to him to follow and together they made their way. To Mark's surprise Alice talked very little and only in response to his questions. Mark wondered if something had happened to Russell. He opened his mouth to ask and thought better of it. It's best for him to not open the floodgates on this one, especially this one. Yet the silence was disconcerting and almost wished to hear about their trip to London in '77 again. Once they were back at the apartment, there was no call for Russell further reinforcing his suspicions. She simply fed her cats their tuna and drew herself a glass of water. She let out a long resigned sigh punctuated by placing the glass overturned into the sink, she told him without looking at him that there were some things she had to do and that she'd be right back. With that she walked down the hallway disappearing into one of the rooms. Mark was genuinely worried now. "Something must've happened she hasn't even once mentioned Russell. Yeah something's definitely up an' I bet th-that I don't get paid." He stood quietly and figured he'd check out some of the rooms for anything he could lift just in case. If anything he could just tell her he was just looking for the bathroom. Silently he crept into the first room he came to. Without closing the door he scouted the room. The interior was illuminated by a small flickering television murmuring news in the corner. The hospital bed lay in the opposite corner from the television, IV stands stood by the bedside and pictures were arranged on the walls around the bed so as to give a queer shrine feeling about it all. There was someone lying on the bed! Startled he made a move for the door and caught himself. It was only Russell. Russell was in a coma or something wasn't he? I mean if he were able to talk Mark would've heard him by now. The figure lay with his legs stretched out and his back propped up as if midway through a sit-up and was wearing those same tan slacks and a button-up white shirt as in all the pictures. The matching camel hair jacket draped over the arm of a couch seated next to the bed. “There's something not right.” Came out as barely a whisper. Creeping further into the room barely noticing the clocks he'd gone in for Mark went to the bed. The clocks ticked monotonously on, the television babbled on bathing the room in a washed out grey. Mark's shadow looming large on the wall behind the bed diminished as he put distance between himself and the door. IV tubes dangled useless from the bag. “Shouldn't they be...” His thought caught in his mind. Russel lay with mouth and eyes open. Dead. Bile immediately leapt to his mouth. Mark inhaled quickly and deeply his eyes darted to the vacant doorway expecting to see Alice. He wondered if she knew, then supplied his own answer. “She has to know, that's why she's acting so weird. Something still isn't...” It was upon closer inspection that Mark realized to his horror that not only was the man dead but it wasn't the same man as in the photographs. This man, skin tight with early rigamortis, looked about forty and much younger than Russell should be. Grey electrical tape crossed his waist pinning his arms to his side. “Oh my God.” He hadn't taken even a step toward freedom when Alice hit him. His skull felt like fire, his vision greyed then darkened, the hardwood floor slipped out from under him and he collapsed. The only thing he saw of her was her ruby red heels and he thought absurdly. How did she sneak up on me in heels. She hit him again. He was aware of blackness and a clock. The grandfather ticked out its tuneless song until it became a march. In the void other clocks could be heard and they too joined the march some in step others not. The ticking of the clocks became everything in the blackness, an unstoppable army that sought to impress itself upon the world. Growing and growing this army encompassed all until Mark felt his own pulse beat to that same damnable march. Each course of blood through his veins brought with it the pain. So bad he felt his head would split. The pain seeped in through the black unconsciousness, unleashing itself bursting the wall of recognition that had previously held it back. Through shear will he forced his eyes to open. He bit down against the pain and found a washrag in his mouth. The rest filled itself in. With the light afforded him he looked down at his body. He was wearing tan slacks and a white-collar shirt with the first two buttons unbuttoned. He was also bound to a hospital bed by electrical tape and being fed intraveinously. Revulsion crested within him, as he tasted the salt of a dead man's mouth. My God how long had the other been in here before the end? Rummaging his thoughts his mind came back to that vacant refrigerator door. No one will visit. How long will I be here? Jesus, the only people who will notice me gone are a couple of fucking drug dealers! The clocks marched on unabated. His mind screamed and he fought against his trappings for a fruitless hour or more before footfalls sounded in the hallway. Alice strode into the room smiling. "Good morning Russell!" she crossed the room bent down and kissed his cheek. "Are you hungry for breakfast?" she asked as she pulled over the IV cart. Checking the needle she said. "You're lucky you married a former war nurse you know." She shook her head as the IV needle found one of Mark's abused veins. "I do so wish you'd take better care of yourself. It's just like that time you wouldn't go to the dentist to get that tooth pulled. You kept on putting it off and putting it off until it just drove you crazy. When you finally went in to have it looked at the dentist said you were lucky you caught it as soon as you did because it could've caused gingivitis and that's expensive to get a root canal done. That was the year we were saving up to go to the Caribbean wasn't it Russell? Gosh that was a good trip. Do you want to watch some television?” She took a seat on the couch and placed her hand over his. Mark studied their intertwined hands his; grimy yet still mostly pink with youth, hers; yellowed with liver spots and bulbous veins surfacing from under a thin skin. “She scouted me out." was all he could think after the rage passed and the shakes became more and more violent. "She scouted me out. She knew I wouldn't be missed. She's probably done it a dozen times." He began to sob. After what seemed like a long time he raised his head, their eyes exchanged looks and Mark found only madness in hers. It was an adamant refusal for her to admit the reality of her husband's death that flashed through her eyes. Earlier she had been so sad and he realized that it was for her Russell. Russell had gone away again leaving her here. But Russell is back now, another occupant in the room of the ticking clocks. How many times had the last guy hoped he would be found? How many others had silently prayed for death? Suddenly, the TV blinked to life and the Today show quivered for a second before the image settled. “Oh this should be nice. I like that man...oooh what's-his-name? I can never seem to get his name right. That's just like how your mother used to call me Margaret.” Matt Lauer was interviewing someone but Mark could not understand who or what over Alice's talking. Tweet
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