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Peachy Life (standard:drama, 1351 words) | |||
Author: Ox | Added: Feb 09 2002 | Views/Reads: 3275/2201 | Story vote: 0.00 (0 votes) |
Mayor Quincy Hatch comes to terms with his failing marriage | |||
Click here to read the first 75 lines of the story Yes, the racking over of the guilt remained stable until that loser Jessie Cunningham buckles under the FBI. For months, agents tailed Cunningham. He had a new shadow, and the shadow turned out to really piss Cunningham off. When he turned, he caught a pair of mystery men whispering about the Oat Flakes Cunningham had had for breakfast. On the night of his mothers’ birthday, Cunningham receives a happy eightieth birthday card from the FBI. “Real cute,” he murmurs. “I’ll teach them a lesson in due time.” He teaches harsh lessons so watch out! Cunningham loved the sensation of dominating man and woman; he loved the control when all they do is scream and scratch until nothing is left in his soul. He can put them to rest, after the numbness arrives; he wants the numbness; it’s the rush you wait for. “That’s what my victims are shit sticking to my butt, nothing more.” His knuckles do the speaking. Many felt the serrated bone; none lived to describe the experience. There was Margaret Murmur, who in her last brief movements in real time tried to salvage a prayer amongst all the problems – ah, she was to late! She felt coldness on the edge of the blade; she went quietly bleeding out to death. Margaret is not alone. Stacks, rows, columns of bodies network through Cunningham’s mind: Jerry, Fiona, Hindi, Ashley, Mark, Brian, Becky, Sarah, and a few more lost over time. They learned pain and death from Cunningham, and in return, Cunningham learned if he stopped madness, if he ceased the fervent killings, it would mean nothing. Murder, death ... shit prevails in the end. It always did. Cunningham really swatted the agency across the face; yeah Cunningham ended his life after chugging the bleach dispersed across the house to find. He found a hole to jump through and escape life in the thick, thin blue, tasty bleach – happy days ahead. There is a furnace in Cunningham’s gut, and it died down that day. It was as though his mother new suicide was coming and so, she planted the jugs of bleach all over the house for her son to feast on. Of course Jessie leaves a suicide note telling all the details of his life. All his juicy details about the events he committed over the years and it is impossible to exclude the Mayor’s murder plot. That cancer growth found its place in the last words of a stark and barren hero. Oh, how the Mayor learned to hate the world after the note hit the public stream. Hatch convinces himself the conviction is a joke. In time the truth will surface. There is no way for him to pay for the murder of Hale. Hale has curves he grapples at dinner, because the smell of spices drove him to her, pulling him to the gravity in her gut. Quincy Hatch just took his wife on the kitchen floor. Over the years he lives off pictures of the dome they built, a mass of two lovers sweating. Behind a string of bars, the sex act unfolds. The grappling, the sniffing, and the snatching of her sides is a rip in his side. Behind bars, there is time to dream. It ends up the mayor’s buddy, Jessie, had mistakenly killed an additional couple engaging in a love affair at the same Day’s Inn Hale and John frequented. This couple engaged in a normal affair not the one Hatch knew so well. “What a life we live” Mayor Hatch would say to Ray Williams, a serial rapist. “I have to mend the crime with constant guilt.” The funniest best part of the whole damn mess of the murder and of the town is that the Mayor is absolutely right ... what a mess we live in. Tweet
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