The October Light of August

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The October Light of August Page 20

by Robert John Jenson


  I stood on the roof of the office building, and watched the world burn. I felt I should be playing a fiddle, and then dismissed the thought as a stupid analogy. The legend was reportedly bullshit anyway. Still, it was hard not to feel like an emperor from up here, and a little bit insane.

  The house had went up in flames, and the trees in its back yard caught, spreading to dead grass and leaves in adjacent homes, and those went up as well. And on it went. Leaves, weeds and grass on the other side of the wooden fence caught a spark, it bloomed, and before long the fence was going up too. The parking lot, the oasis of asphalt, seemed to be keeping the fire free from reaching the office and retail complex, but the fire looked like it was spreading west and south.

  I guess I didn’t think that through very well, I thought.

  I wondered at other possible survivors out there, ratted out of their hiding places and now homeless. It’s a wonder it hasn’t burned before now. But the thought didn’t fill any of the emptiness inside me. I had no tears, no laughter, no feelings. My hand throbbed mightily – I had doused it with rubbing alcohol and wrapped it with bandages. The bullet had gone clean through, but I had no idea if I would get an infection or not. It hurt, but I couldn’t even begin to worry about the ramifications of my left hand being crippled.

  Four square blocks of homes were burning, with no indication it would stop. I tried to visualize natural breaks where it might die out, but I was tired and just could not do it. For all I knew it would burn all the way to the river. I bet it could be seen from down there and up on the South Hill. Let them wonder at it, I thought.

  The dead were certainly attracted to it. More than I had ever seen in some time were gathered in the parking lot, milling around in a sluggish Brownian motion. I could actually see one in the middle of the conflagration, a walking torch grimly marching down the middle of a street. I wondered how far it could go, and if it would spread the fire even more. But it fell to its knees and then collapsed in the street, burning away like a dab of hot tar. The dead were drawn to the fire, but seemed to know to stay out of it. There were plenty that would get caught up in the inferno I was sure. I thought of Pink, and managed a tired smile.

  Did it have to come to this? I thought. Did it have to be so extreme? Why couldn't I have let the prick just take out the damned dead guy and then go on his way? The dead would have been attracted if he had started shooting, sure, but I could have handled it. I could have hidden until the Warrior and his far deadlier companion were gone. Did it have to come this? Or did I just want to take my anger out on someone finally? If so, I was as bad as the whole stinking lot of them.

  It might freeze again tonight, maybe even dip into the twenties. I would have to spend the night up here, though. If the building caught fire, I would need to be out and not huddled up in my hidey-hole. I wasn’t sure how I could escape the notice of the dead constantly streaming into the area if I tried to leave. With one hand useless, guns didn’t seem so bourgeois now. Running home in the dark, there was no way I was going to search for the supplies of the warrior and his friend. I never heard any ammo firing off as the fire raged, so maybe their stash was not close at hand anyways.

  I sat in a deck chair, bundled in a sleeping bag against the cold, and watched the sky glow red.

  I awoke, startled, and coughed. The sun was a dim ball in a haze of smoke behind me. The sky had a yellow pallor to it with ash drifting out of it in black flakes. I struggled out of my sleeping bag and the chair. The immediate neighborhood below me smoldered, but the flames had died down there.

  To the west a massive wall of smoke rose to the sky. Clearly, the fire was still raging its way through the North Side. I stumbled over to the roof's edge and peered down into the parking lot. The dead still made their way across the pavement, but perhaps there were less of them. I moved along all four sides of the roof, and couldn't see any fires growing this side of the parking lot and alley. Dead were still wandering into the area from the east, north and south, but in the light of day they didn’t look so formidable. And they were slow, very slow. The below-freezing temperature had already taken its toll on them. Still, I had no plans to leave the building for awhile.

  My hand felt like a brick, and I decided to take some more pain relievers. I wasn’t sure if I could ever summon the courage to inspect the hand thoroughly. I didn’t know what I could actually do for it. Tendons, bones, were shattered - that much was certain. I knew if I probed and prodded the wound I would pass out - I could deal with pain, but was damned squeamish with my own blood. Always have been. One thing I was sure of - if infection set in, I was done for.

  I paused at the roof-top access to listen, and then unlocked the chain I had wrapped around it. I didn’t think any of the dead could have made it up this far since last night, but… I swung the door open silently, and listened. I heard and smelled nothing and began a careful descent to the sixth floor. Halfway down, the thought of trying to crawl up into my hidey-hole made me sick to my stomach.

  Snowflakes lay on her shoulders, hair, eyelashes. They remained frozen and delicate, and gave Pink an appearance of royalty - an ice princess. Almost. If it weren’t for the filthy and stained tank top, and the sweat pants puddled around her ankles. I pulled the sweats up past her hips, embarrassed, and groped for the drawstring to tighten them up. Once done, I stood back and stared at her for a moment. I wiped her face thoroughly with sanitizing wipes, but it did little to make her look…better. Just a little less gruesome. Her skin was mottled and gray – the cold did not help its pallor, of course, and it was looking hardened, tougher. Her blue eyes were droopy and glazed. Something had fought like hell with her and gouges ran across her arms and her left cheek. She was thinner than when I had first seen her, but on the whole she wasn’t in awful shape. Other than being dead, that is.

  I tried to suppress a spasm of coughing, lost, and spent a minute hunched over and gasping. Dragging Pink in had cost me a lot of energy that I didn’t have, along with the frozen air searing my lungs. An early fall storm had shown up and began to coat the frost with snow. I felt we were going to be in for a solid winter.

  Shaking with chills, the fever was taking its toll. The last time I had dared look at my hand, dark tendrils were creeping their way under the skin, up the wrist. My hand was almost useless. Wrapped up tight, I could wield it as a club, and that was about it. Still, I had found Pink up by the gas station – frozen and motionless on the corner like she was waiting for the light to change. I dragged her all the way back to the office building, and we were now in what had been the café on the street level. I had been wary that my body heat might warm her to where she might begin to stir, so I wrapped her in my sleeping bag and hauled her in it all the way to the tower. I didn't think of friction warming her up, but evidently that wasn’t a problem. I would have to change that, though, and soon.

  It has been close to two weeks since my hand has been shot, and when I noticed the signs of blood poisoning, I knew that it was over. There were no antibiotics to be found these days. I searched myself for pangs of fear or regret, but I was just too tired. No, I don’t want to die. But it is coming anyways, and maybe I could choose the time - and how. Or whatever...

  I stared at Pink until I found myself teetering and almost falling over. I caught myself, and wondered what Pink – the alive Pink – would think of me now, and what I planned. Would she hate me for using her like this? Or would she think I deserved it? I know I felt that way. Regardless, I couldn’t see that young woman anymore. She was long gone, and had left with the rest of humanity, civility and sanity in the world. The Pink standing before me now would not care.

  I sighed, shrugged my arms out of my parka. The cold made me stagger, and a renewed bout of chills nearly crippled me. I stepped behind Pink, wrapped my arms around her – my good right arm encircling her neck, my wounded arm across her midriff. I nestled my chin next to her right ear, and let the trembles take over until they melted into the heat of the fever. After awhile, I dozed.<
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  Pink’s neck jerked once. Then again. Her shoulders twitched, and I could feel her jaw spasm above my right arm.

  “There we go,” I whispered.

  Her neck jerked again, and tried to turn. I brought my arm up, and held it against her cold lips. I could feel them working against my arm, and finally they parted, sliding across my hot skin and then I could feel her teeth, as hard and callous as tombstones. She worked her mouth, trying to limber her jaws until she could work up the pressure of a solid bite. I tried to help by slightly sawing the arm back and forth, and finally she bit and held it. I pulled, and could feel the skin stretch. Pink bit harder, and then it hurt. I tried pushing back towards her, could feel her tongue twisting against my arm and then she bit through and I yanked the arm away and stumbled back from her. A wound about the size of a quarter seeped on my arm.

  Her head shook as she worked over the bit of my skin in her mouth. I continued my retreat, blood running down my arm. Maybe you should have let her bite your bum arm, genius, I thought. Ah well, not like her bite will be a problem for me much longer…

  Pink wobbled, clearly trying to turn and pursue me, but her legs would not work, nor her arms. I couldn’t bear the thought of her falling over, so I shoved her into a corner and hoped she would freeze up again soon. The dead get back up after falling, of course, but I didn’t like the idea of Pink having to work any harder than she needed to.

  I backed away from her, and sat down on a stool at the lunch counter. I thought about putting the parka back on, but it seemed like too much work. I am shaking, maybe I ought to move to a chair, something I might not fall out of. I just sit and shake, though, and wonder how long I will last. Good luck reading this!

  Will I die before the virus has a chance to take hold? I have no clue how that works. Perhaps the parka will help incubate the damned thing, but I just sit on the stool and continue to tremble and spasm, and outside the snow begins to pile up.

  I woke when I hit the floor. I still felt hot, but grab at the counter until I stood, shaking, shaking, shaking. Odd. I am hungry for the first time in...I can't remember. I look around, did not remember what I was looking for, but saw this book. So I will write. Until I can not.

  I am not giving up Jackie. I am just giving in. I am sorry. All my fault.

  Pink stands in the corner. She has been a bad girl. Fucker bit me – ha! Well deserved

  I am here? I am writing this? I feel dim

  fading not real

  like the october light of august

  am i hallucination? ha!

  I am hot well deserved

  does this make sense

  am I really here

  I am sorry i sorry

  I am sorry

  hungry

  Epilogue

  Lori zipped the books into the freezer bag, and then tucked them into her backpack. She watched her sister over at the edge of the roof, staring south. It was warmer today, sunnier. Clouds still blocked out much of the blue sky, but it didn't feel like rain.

  She feels let down, Lori thought. I guess I do too.

  She didn't know what to make of the notebooks. They had no idea of Artie's back story when they had met him – on another rooftop – last year. Jesus, it felt both so long ago, and also like it was minutes ago. Is this what it's like, growing older? The years will fill up and then just fly by?

  She moved over to her sister, wrapped her arms around her, and rested her cheek against an ear. They stared south, watching the clouds blow across the sky. Lori worked her jaw back and forth, rocking her sister's head until the girl drove an elbow into her stomach. Lori laughed, and squeezed her sister tighter.

  “We got here too late,” Ashley said.

  “Nothing we could do about that,” Lori replied.

  “We should have made him come with us.”

  “I don't think we could have.”

  Ashley squirmed free of her sister's embrace, and turned to face her.

  “You could convince a crack-head to go to Sunday school,” she accused the older woman. “He would have come with us.”

  Lori smiled tiredly, not wanting to argue. Shit, am I really growing up? That's so unfair...

  “I don't think you're remembering our state of mind last summer,” she said, and Ashley scowled.

  “We read the book,” she continued. “He couldn't take another loss. For some freakin' reason, he worried about us – maybe even liked us. Even after holding him at gunpoint for a night.”

  “That's what makes it so bad,” her sister said, and the tears flowed. So Lori had no choice but to cry as well. They held each other, but could not cry for long. They had been through far, far worse in the last two years, after all, and those scars would be bold and ragged for as long as they lived.

  “I just wish,” Ashley said into her chest, “that he could have seen it over there.” She tipped her head east.

  Lori nodded her head.

  “Me too,” she said. Maybe he wouldn't have been so...negative if he could have seen people living together, helping each other, fighting for each other, and not against.

  “Dad is going to be pissed we didn't bring him back,” muttered Ashley.

  “Dad is pissed anyway,” laughed Lori, and her sister chuckled.

  “Mom won't talk to us for years, I bet!”

  “Is that so bad?” asked Lori, and they laughed some more.

  Yes, they had seen horror. But the unimaginable joy discovering your parents alive at your grandparent's house had...well, not made up for everything they had went through, but it sure helped. Dad walked with a cane now, mom had a patch over her right eye. Neither would talk about their wounds – Lori sensed they would have been embarrassed to after learning what their daughters had gone through to make it home.

  “You should see the other guys,” her father had quipped, and would say no more. The attempt at humor could not hide the raw, naked guilt she could read in his eyes. No matter that their parents had raised them to be independent-minded, they had let their babies out of their sight, and look at what in the hell had happened...

  We all have our guilt to carry, daddy, she had thought. But she knew he could never forgive himself for not helping to protect his daughters.

  At first wintering in Rathdrum, Idaho, had been kind of heaven. Friends and family were in awe of their journey, and never complained of them waking at night with a shout – it seemed almost everyone did that, too. They took the easier life for granted. Surely, they deserved it? A neighborhood had banded together, fought off the dead – and the living – and seemed to have made it through the worst of the pandemic. It had been what they had hoped for, trudging all those miles across the tracks.

  But they had grown restless - it was hard to keep still after being on the move for so long. Both of them had insisted on taking shifts patrolling the borders of the neighborhood, doing whatever busy work they were allowed. But staying in one place for so long and not having the pervasive fear always gnawing at them, always keeping them on edge and sharp... It felt wrong. And they felt guilty. Dead friends and boyfriends could not be brought back to life, but maybe they could help someone else?

  So they had asked to borrow a truck – a quick trip to Spokane and back. Absolutely not, they were told – a waste of gas. They were here. They were safe. They should be happy. Their parents should have remembered throwing down absolutes usually backfired, and so the sisters had filled up their backpacks as their father fumed and pleaded, practically grinding a hole in the floor with his cane. He had threatened to follow them all the way, unarmed and defenseless. They took his cane away from him, and said they would be back before he could crawl a fraction of the way there.

  The neighborhood had watched them leave one cold spring morning – following the railroad tracks, naturally. Ashley turned once, and flashed them the peace sign.

  A crow dove across the rooftop, silent except for the flapping of its wings. It circled back north and scolded loudly as it spiraled down near the off
ice supply store then shot over to them again, cawing. Others soon joined it, and they settled in the dead trees of the parking lot. Lori moved to the north side of the roof and looked down, but couldn't see any dead down there. Her sister joined her, and they looked out over what was their old world, gray and motionless and soon to merge back into the earth as if it had never been there at all.

  The mall – that damned thing was still around. Many wasted days were spent there, for sure. The innocent, giggling girls who prowled its stores were gone, but Lori held no contempt for them. We were only a product of our times. Much like we are now. This world was dingy and overgrown and deadly. But she could still see glimpses of the old one, and it tugged at her heart so she turned away and stared at their backpacks. A disturbingly sharp yard tool lay on the rooftop next to them.

  How they had missed it on their first inspection of the roof Lori didn't know – they were probably just in a hurry, and sloppy. But as they had set up camp, Ashley spotted the spear jammed deeply into the rooftop, as if daring them to draw it out. The only thing that had been missing was a shaft of sunlight spotlighting the damned thing. They had laughed, and walked over to it.

  “Who so pulleth out this – damn it, Ash!” Her sister had snatched the spear from the roof before Lori could finish intoning her speech.

  “Dibs!” Ashley had laughed.

  “Okay, grabby,” Lori had muttered, then laughed. “I guess that makes you the rightwise queen of all...” She had waved her hand absently, but didn't finish the remark.

  Lori gazed at the spear with a new perspective, and smiled tiredly.

 

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