PRAY TO STAY DEAD
Mason James Cole
NEW ORLEANS
2011
This is a work of fiction. All characters and events portrayed within are fictitious,
and any resemblance to real people or events is purely coincidental.
Pray to Stay Dead
First printing by Creeping Hemlock Press, February 2011
ISBN-10: 0-9769217-1-5
ISBN-13: 978-0-9769217-1-4
Pray to Stay Dead copyright © 2010 by Mason James Cole
All rights reserved, including the right to reproduce this book, or portions thereof,
in any form.
Cover artwork by Zach McCain (www.zachmccain.com)
Cover design & book design by Julia Sevin
A Print Is Dead book
Print Is Dead is a zombie-themed imprint of Creeping Hemlock Press
Editors: R.J. & Julia Sevin
Creeping Hemlock Productions, LLC
www.printisdead.com
www.creepinghemlock.com
This book is lovingly dedicated to George A. Romero,
Tobe Hooper, Jack Ketchum, and Richard Milhous Nixon;
and to those wise few who know the truth:
The world ended in 1974.
PRAY TO STAY DEAD
One
Her mother had been dead for three days, but Colleen couldn’t quite get a grip on the idea. It was slick and slippery and it didn’t seem real at all, even as it churned her stomach and wore her down with bureaucratic busywork and morbid decision-making. It was smoke and razor blades: she could not touch it, but it could open her flesh to the bone.
“I’m glad she’s dead,” said her brother.
She sneered but said nothing. In truth, Colleen had thought the same thing at several points over the past few days: shortly after someone from the hospital called to inform her that her mother was dead; while she made arrangements with the gaunt-faced funeral home director; while she stared at her mother lying in the casket, waxen and unreal. And again, moments ago, while sitting in the hush of the living room with her brother and waiting for Guy and the others to arrive. She had thought it more times than she knew, but she hadn’t been able to say it. Daniel had no such reservations.
He sat on the edge of the sofa, hands hanging between his knees, head low. Staring at the floor. She didn’t say anything until he looked up at her. His eyes were dry.
“How can you say that?” The expected response. It popped out like a cuckoo clock bird. It was bullshit.
“Come on,” he said, throwing himself back against the cushions, sandy hair in his eyes. “You haven’t thought it?”
“I just think that—”
“Of course you have.”
“I just—”
“And you are glad, right?”
Her eyes were dry too. She could cry only so much.
She nodded, but that wasn’t enough for him: “Then say it.”
“I don’t think—”
“Say it,” he said, whipping his hair from his face with a snap of the neck—a well-practiced move. “She isn’t listening.”
Colleen didn’t bother fighting him on this. Daniel declared himself an atheist three years ago, at the age of fifteen, shortly after he read an interview in which one of his idols—she couldn’t remember if it was Bowie or Lennon—mentioned Nietzsche. The next day, Daniel had returned from the library with a small stack of philosophy texts, and that was it. And he hadn’t let them forget—not even as Dorine Brockenbraugh lay on her deathbed asking for her children to pray with her. A derisive sigh, a roll of the eyes, a flip of the hair, and he was out of the room.
“Well?”
“What?”
He was still on it.
“Okay,” she said, thinking of her mother, not long before her death, sitting on the edge of the hospital bed following another invasive and humiliating round of tests, her brow shining with sweat, her needle-punctured arms dotted with small round band-aids. She’d looked her daughter in the eyes and exhaled once—whoo—her cheeks puffing, a marathon runner pausing a few miles from the finish line. The blasted look in her eyes: she was ready for the race to end.
“Okay, what?”
“I’m glad she’s dead.”
“I know you are,” he said, smiling, his teeth a jumble. “But why?”
“Why?”
“Yeah. Why are you glad she’s dead?”
“Because...” Colleen groped around for the right response. All that came to mind, however, all that seemed safe and right to speak, was the canned one, and Daniel knew it. Cuckoo on deck.
“Don’t you dare say ‘because she’s in a better place.’ I swear to God if you do I’ll come across this coffee table and give you a fat lip.”
“Because she’s in a better place?” She said, half smiling and shrugging.
“Yeah.” He shook his head and then whipped his hair into place again. He fished a joint and a lighter out of his shirt pocket and lit up.
“Jesus, Dan, here?” she said. He filled his lungs and blew smoke toward her. She waved it away. “You’re such a child.”
“Yeah, I really am.” He held up his joint. “This right here is why I’m glad. I’m glad because I can sit in my own damned living room and smoke grass if I want to. I’m glad because I don’t ever have to help bathe her and wipe her ass again. I’m glad because I don’t have to listen to her scream because the morphine isn’t doing shit.”
She looked down. He blew more smoke at her. She didn’t bother waving it away. Inhaled a little.
“And yeah, I’m glad she’s not in pain anymore. She’s not up in the sky, playing harps and bowling with Moses, but ceasing to exist is better than screaming yourself to sleep and shitting your pants.
“Most of all? I’m glad my life starts now. I’m glad that yours starts now. You’re twenty-three, Colleen. What if she’d lived another three years? Or maybe five? Jesus. Can you imagine that?”
“You wouldn’t have hung around.”
“But you, see, you think that’s a virtue. You’d have stayed by her side, holding her hand and talking to Jesus, all because she refused to allow anyone but her babies to care for her. And what about us? What if she had lived another five years and if both of us had stayed right here with her? Did she even think about that? Did she think about us, about what that would do to us—what it was doing to us? No, she didn’t.”
Colleen remembered the disappointment in her high school advisor’s eyes when she’d told him that she would not be starting college the following year. Her line about no longer having enough money wasn’t entirely true—her mom’s medical bills had taken a bloody chunk out of her college savings, yes, but she’d been awarded a healthy scholarship, and there simply had been no financial reason to postpone college. It was only for one year, she’d assured him and herself and her friends, thinking in the shadows of her head that her mother would surely be gone by then. One year had turned to four, and now she was where she was. Her brother was right. He was an asshole, but he was right.
They sat without speaking for a few minutes. Daniel offered her what was left of his joint. She shook her head. He shrugged, tossed his hair back, and finished it himself, pressing it out on the bottom of his shoe. She watched the ashes fall to the carpet and wondered who would pass the vacuum cleaner. Daniel leaned back and stared at the ceiling. Colleen got up and went into her bedroom, pausing for a moment outside of her mother’s bedroom. The door was closed and she had to beat back the habit to lean in and listen for the rhythmic and labored sound of her mother’s breathing. She made herself grab hold of the slippery idea: there was only silence in there. She walked on.
In her bedroom, she gave her dresser a once-over, ma
king sure she hadn’t forgotten anything, then went into her bathroom and grabbed a few more pads, just in case. She was beginning to cramp up, and she was grateful that their plans for the coming week involved skis and not bathing suits.
She returned to the living room and stuffed the handful of pads deep into her duffel bag, beneath the light blue slip and panties that she probably wouldn’t be modeling for Guy. She sat across from Daniel. His eyes were closed.
“You really still believe all of that shit?” He asked, sounding like less of an asshole and more like someone who was genuinely interested in what she thought. “Life after death?”
“Sure,” she said, and followed her words with a shrug. “I guess.”
He leaned forward, eyes on her. She saw from the look in his eyes that he wanted to say something, that he was having a hard time holding back. “What?” She asked.
“Nothing.” His coiled, about-to-strike energy dissipated, and he sank back against the couch.
“Nothing my ass, man. And since when do you not speak your mind.”
“I’m tired of the conversation, is all. We’re running in circles, and that’s just a waste of time.” He smiled. “Besides, you’re a smart girl. You know the truth, even if you pretend not to.”
“All right, already.”
“That mom’s in the ground. That you’ll never see her again.”
Colleen looked away, stared at the front door. Where the hell were the others already?
“That dead is dead.”
It was more than he had spoken to her in months, and it was there that the conversation dropped and didn’t get up. A few minutes later Daniel heard the rumble of an engine outside. The doorbell rang, and Colleen hopped up and opened the front door. There Kimberly, Colleen’s best friend since childhood, grabbed Colleen and squeezed.
“You okay, Brock?” Kimberly asked, touching Colleen’s cheek. Daniel wasn’t sure he’d ever heard Kim call Colleen by her first name.
“Yes,” Colleen said. “I just want to get out of here. Are we all set up?”
“Mm-hm! You ready to have a good time?”
“I’ve been ready.”
“Good.” Shifting into hushed tones, his sister and her best friend stepped from sight. Outside, someone said something. It sounded like Guy.
Daniel shoved himself up from the couch, picked up his bag, and shuffled toward the front. Colleen’s bag was where she left it, either on purpose or accidentally, just inside the door by his mother’s godawful wrought iron umbrella stand. Wishing he were higher, he dropped to his knees and unzipped her bag and rummaged around until he found Colleen’s pads. He pulled them out, chuckled once, and stood up. He tossed the pads behind the couch and, picking up their bags, left the house.
Outside, Colleen was greeting Guy. Adjusting his shoulder strap, Daniel stepped toward Kimberly.
“Hey, Kim,” he said, and wanted to punch himself in the nuts. He wondered if he sounded as puppy-dog wistful to Kimberly as he did to himself.
“Hello, Daniel,” she said, and his face grew hot. The dismissive tone of her voice said it all, and as he stepped past her and toward the back of the van, he wondered if she’d rolled her eyes. He was used to it. The manner with which she treated him was dependent upon how many of her friends were around. If it was just the two of them, she treated him like a person, an equal. If the whole gang was in tow, well, he merited only condescension and distance or outright indifference.
He’d known Kimberly since he was five, when she’d sleep over along with Colleen’s other friends. Most of them came and went, but she remained, year after year. She was only a year older than he, and their bodies had begun to mature at roughly the same time. He’d watched her fill out her pajamas over the course of countless sleepovers, and on two flushed occasions he’d seen her naked.
When he was eleven, he’d awakened in the middle of the night to go to the bathroom. His business complete, he’d opened the bathroom door and stepped into the hall, and there she was, wearing only her cotton undies and a sleepy-eyed look of surprise, her hair a mess. She’d covered her small breasts, and eased past him into the bathroom, shutting the door and locking it. Three years later, déjà vu: middle of the night, same hall, same bathroom. Only her breasts were larger, and she wore nothing at all. She didn’t cover herself that time. A Mona Lisa smile on her lips, she had allowed his eyes to take in every inch.
Though both incidents had seemed accidental, he came to believe otherwise. For whatever reason, either to throw him a bone or simply to tease and torment or possibly to stroke her own ego, she’d elected to provide him with years of masturbatory fuel.
Making matters worse, they’d kissed once, not even a year ago. The party had been dim and loud, and they’d been drunk and high and rubbing against one another while, on the stereo, Arthur Brown bade them to burn. He was sure that the kiss had meant nothing to her, that it had been no different from the time she’d allowed him to stare at her tits, just as serendipitous, just as empty, but that was fine. When it came to Kimberly, he’d apparently take what he could get.
“How’s Sunny?” Kimberly asked him as he pressed his duffel bag into the back of the van, atop everyone else’s luggage.
“She’s doing fine.” It was a load. His girlfriend for the past seven months was drinking too much, and when she wasn’t drinking she was dropping acid and screaming at the spiders on her arms or some shit, and the wall that had always existed between them was growing a little thicker each day.
He saw no reason to tell Kimberly any of that.
“She still coming?”
“She’s meeting us sometime tomorrow, I think.”
“All right.”
“Yeah.”
“Listen,” she began, and he knew what was coming. It had to, they both knew it, but it was fine—at least she was talking to him with the spurs off. “You doing okay?”
“What, you mean because of my mom?”
“Yeah, you know...”
“Yeah, I’m doing just fine, thanks.”
“Okay, that’s good.” She shuffled her feet, looking down, to the left, to the right—pretty much anywhere if it meant she didn’t have to hold his gaze for more than three seconds.
“What?” He asked.
“What?” She answered.
“You want to tell me something,” Daniel said. “So tell me.”
“You smell like grass.”
“I know,” he said.
“You got any more?”
“A little, but it’s shit. I got it from Greg.”
“Shit.”
“That’s all he sells. Doesn’t matter. We can get some more. You were saying?”
She looked over at Guy and Colleen, who stood talking, their faces close. Guy’s hand was on Colleen’s ass, pressing her to him.
“Richard is coming,” She said. “We’re going to pick him up.”
“I know.”
“I know you know, it’s just that…”
“What?”
“I don’t, you know…?”
“No,” he said. His face was still hot, though for different reasons. “I don’t think I do.”
“Richard and I are pretty serious, okay?”
“That’s great. Sunny and I are pretty serious, too. It happens sometimes when you put boys and girls together.”
“I just didn’t want you to get jealous. I know how you feel and—”
“I don’t think you do, Kim, but everything’s fine,” he said. “Okay?”
“Okay.”
He left her standing at the rear of the van and slid himself across the back seat. Crap or not, he was feeling Greg’s cheap grass. He leaned back and closed his eyes. The van rocked as the others climbed into it.
“Look at this,” Guy said. “You didn’t save any for me, you dickhead?”
“I got a little more,” Daniel said, indicating the back of the van with his thumb.
“But it’s shit,” Kimberly said. Daniel didn’t open his ey
es, but he could tell from the sound of her voice that she was sitting on the seat in front of him.
“He get it from Greg?” Guy asked.
“You know it,” Kimberly said.
By the time they picked up Richard, Daniel was having trouble staying awake. He nodded off, opened his eyes. Guy drove, laughing about something with Colleen. Bowie was on the radio, and Kimberly was making out with Richard. “Diamond Dogs” gave way to “Sweet Thing”—one of guy’s 8-track tapes, then, not the radio, and when the tape was over, Colleen popped it out and pressed in Alice Cooper.
They drove north, exchanging civilization for dense redwood forest, laughing and talking and listening to one tape after another, never tuning in to the radio to hear the weather or to listen to the Top 40 or to check in on the general state of world affairs.
Daniel woke up at some point and rolled a fat one from the dwindling stash of Greg’s shitty grass in his bag, which they passed around. Only the front seat—Colleen and Guy—didn’t partake, until the joint was mostly spent, anyway. Colleen took it from Kimberly and, closing her eyes, filled her lungs. She coughed, of course, and everyone laughed.
Less than an hour later they arrived at their first stop on the road to three snow- and sex-filled days in Tahoe, a campsite in Sutter Creek, not far from Sacramento. Kimberly had talked it up, and it was as nice as she’d promised, and empty. Not a soul in sight.
They cooked hot dogs over an open fire, tried to skinny dip in the river but quit at about ankle level due to the cold (Daniel sat it out, opting to remain at the campsite and read a dog-eared Frederik Pohl paperback), and when the sky darkened they fed the fire, hastily pitched three small tents, and retired.
Mercifully, Colleen had not yet started her period, so there was love, slow and steady and ever so quiet. Kimberly and Richard went at it like animals, grunting and panting and, in the end, laughing like maniacs. Daniel popped a few downers, even though he didn’t really need them, and passed out.
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