Quite Contrary

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Quite Contrary Page 28

by Richard Roberts


  “Are you ready for love, beautiful Puzzle?” the Wolf asked. His claws hooked into that filmy lingerie slip, pulling down. The fabric tore, as did her bra. The remains fell open around her shoulders, baring everything above the waist.

  “I hope so,” she answered in a hush.

  He leaned his mouth in to her naked chest, parted his lips, and sunk his fangs between her ribs. Blood ran around them, and Puzzle screamed in shock. The scream stopped suddenly, because with a chorus of snaps and squelches, the Wolf tore out her ribcage.

  Blood. It poured all over the Wolf’s head. Lumpy red and gray things slid and hung out of the gap. More blood, running down her waist and legs. Puzzle was still alive. Her lips moved, but she couldn’t speak. She stared down at the Wolf. I could see the pain in the tightness of her face, but all she really looked was confused and betrayed. That is, until the Wolf gave a little whine, and blood-covered teeth in a blood-covered mouth reached out to Puzzle’s forearm and ripped the meat off it. Then, she tried to scream again, and her legs fell out from underneath her. She only fell a few inches. He caught her, propping her up in both hands.

  I couldn’t watch this. That blobby thing hanging out had to be Puzzle’s liver. I couldn’t watch this. Everything was oozing red. I pulled my face away. There had to be a way out. The window in Puzzle’s room still had bars blocking it.

  The door out into the clinic was still open. Just a little, because wooden fingers held it at the bottom.

  I ran. I couldn’t feel my legs, but I kept them under me. A few steps and my shoes touched blood. They splashed through a puddle of it. Smeared with gore, still hairy around the haunches, my Wolf sat in front of me, chewing on her. My hips brushed his as I pushed past. I couldn’t make my hands get a proper grip on the door, so I shoved it open with my arm. Scarecrow lay on her side, her arm stretched out to grab the door’s edge and keep it open for me. Her head looked up. She was still alive.

  I reached down and tried to grab her hand, and she grabbed mine. We both pulled, and she staggered to her feet. Something made a wet gurgle and something else rasped and splattered behind me. I didn’t have to look. In my head, I could see Puzzle’s wet, bloody liver falling out of her chest, trailing tubes.

  Scarecrow pulled me now, and we stumbled through the clinic, leaving bloody footprints. A rectangle of sunshine was the front door, and Scarecrow yanked it open and we were outside. The door shut behind us. I couldn’t hear anything from inside. The only blood I saw was smeared around the bottom edges of my shoes.

  No, that wasn’t true. I could see Puzzle’s blood gushing over my Wolf’s face, hear the faint, lustful whine of pleasure he made as her chest fell open. I could feel my body again, and it shook so hard now I wasn’t sure if I could stay standing.

  “We need to run, Miss Mary,” Rat squeaked into my ear.

  Scarecrow tugged at my hand. “I really want to get away.”

  We couldn’t. That was what Rose had told me. There was no getting away. The Wolf was going to do that to me. His teeth would rip a hole in me and everything blobby and red would fall out. He’d take his time, chewing and tearing, and I’d have to watch because it would take so damn long for me to die. I’d been pretending I didn’t remember what Rose told me all along, but I knew she was right. I’d known then that she was right.

  “We’re near my world, Rat. Civilization. Unlostness. Whatever. Take me home, please. Get me out of this story forever.” I wrapped my arms around myself, trying to squeeze the shaking out of me.

  “I don’t know that I can. If I do, it will change you. Hurt you in ugly ways,” Rat said.

  The little bastard. Didn’t he see what I just saw? Couldn’t he see it in his head, still?

  “I don’t care. I don’t give a fuck, okay? I’m going to die. He’s going to rip me open unless you take me home. Take me home, Rat. Please!” I begged.

  He was my rat. He understood please. He clawed at the top of his own head, but he understood it. “The road. We’ll start with the road.”

  Scarecrow helped pull me while I figured out how to run again.

  e walked up the gravel path back to the rest stop. At least on gravel I couldn’t see the bloody footprints my boots were leaving.

  “Shouldn’t we go in some other direction?” Scarecrow asked, “When that Joseph man comes back, won’t we walk right into him?”

  I didn’t care.

  “We have time,” Rat answered. He’d resumed his perch on my shoulder, looking forward and back and all around constantly. “His story won’t try to stop us anymore.”

  Because Puzzle had been ripped into a bleeding mess and died in pain, not even knowing why.

  I didn’t want to think about that. Let Rat do it. We’d climbed the subtle rise until the rest stop was no longer a big, distant building. I could see details now, like the nearest door. I’d left it open. Now it was shut, jammed shut with a board through the push bar. I couldn’t see anything inside, because oily black slime covered the inside of the glass. It looked just like the oily black slime painting paw prints on the concrete leading out the door.

  Something else had changed. A pickup truck sat next to one of the gas pumps. It should have been obvious the pump didn’t work, but a big man was kicking it and snarling at it anyway. I couldn’t make out the words, but they were obviously profanity.

  Rat tugged on my neck with one paw and pointed at the edge of the building. I headed towards the wall where I’d be less conspicuous. When Scarecrow didn’t follow me after the first step, I grabbed her wooden wrist and pulled her along.

  “Do you think he’d give us a ride? We—” Scarecrow asked. “Do you even listen? We already told you, hitchhiking will get me killed!” Even faster.

  “We can’t ask, and we can’t drive ourselves, but we really need that ride.” Rat dropped backwards off my shoulder, claws skidding along my horrible Red Riding Hood costume until he dropped onto the concrete. “I’ll distract him.”

  It was a pickup truck, so the other half was pretty obvious. Rat scurried out from behind cover. The shouty guy didn’t notice, right up until Rat crawled into the leg of his pants and bit him. The guy screamed even more profanity, kicked Rat out of his pants, and as Rat ran in the opposite direction from us, pulled out a pistol and fired a shot at him.

  The pop was loud! So loud that in the seconds after he fired, echoes I knew weren’t real pounded in my ears. That little brown shape was Rat still streaking away. The bullet hadn’t hit Rat, and Rat had the guy’s full attention. Perfect. His ears had to be ringing twice as loud as mine and I could barely hear my own footsteps as I ran across the gas station’s lot to the pickup truck. Another ear piercing gunshot. This guy really held a grudge. He was hardly ten feet from us as I climbed over the edge of his truck’s carrying bed, pulled Scarecrow up fast, and then lay down under the wall. The bed was half full and piled high with green bags made out of that woven plastic stuff used for tarps. It gave enough cover. His swearing rumbled at the edge of my distorted hearing as he climbed into the cab and slammed the door.

  I felt way too exposed as I leaned over the edge of the bed, but the engine started up without a pause. Rat had just enough time to streak up the asphalt and jump up to grab the edge of my sleeve before the truck lurched into motion. I sank back onto the lumpy metal bed in relief. We were getting far and fast away from here.

  After that, we sat around under the shadow of the plastic bags to stay out of sight. I folded my arms over my knees and stared at dead grass and huge spires of rock. Across from me, Scarecrow did exactly the same thing. Rat tried to climb up on my knee, but I pushed him off. I was in no hurry to be touched right now. Especially by something with claws.

  Grass and rocks slid past, and nothing happened. I saw exactly one car, a pitch-black sports car too low and sleek to be real. It wasn’t any of my business.

  My head and shoulders dragged. I hadn’t gotten enough sleep last night. I could never get enough sleep to be ready for what I’d seen this morning
. My butt ached from the lumpy metal bed, and my back from slouching against the side out of sight, so sleep wasn’t going to happen.

  I have no idea how I signaled that. I didn’t mean to, but Scarecrow sat up across from me and yanked and twisted one of the green bags, pulling it off the pile and pushing it past me. I twisted out of the way, biting back my urge to yell at her for bothering me, until I figured it out. I helped her turn the bag behind me, and lay back on it. It felt like it was stuffed with leaves and sticks and logs, but it was way more comfortable than corrugated metal.

  I drifted off to sleep.

  Not a good idea. No sooner did I relax than my body turned to wood, and I struggled with my arms and head, unable to stop them from shoving a crowbar between Puzzle’s ribs. My Wolf licked the blood from the wound as Puzzle screamed faintly in the distance. Blood sprayed all over both of us as I twisted her rib cage open. Reaching into the slithering mass of her organs, I pulled out the slimy, pulsing blob of her heart and placed it into my Wolf’s mouth. As his tongue glided over my hand, I managed to wake myself up.

  Then, all I had to do was get control of my breathing and not cry. Had I screamed? No, nobody seemed to have noticed. Not that Scarecrow’s expression ever changed from a copy of my irritable pout. The truck didn’t slow down. Instead, we zoomed over a bridge across a river, and on the other side everything turned green. Well, brown and green, late fall grass and colorful dying leaves and a few trees that were evergreens or just stubborn.

  Scarecrow finally got too bored. How she’d held it back all this time I had no idea. She slipped a hand under one of the bags and tugged it up, then poked at the one underneath. She kept pushing at bags as she asked, “What do you think is in these?”

  “Leaves and wood,” I answered. Talk about your obvious question.

  “Sure, but there has to be something else, right? Maybe he’s stupid, but he can’t just be hauling a few bags of leaves across country,” she said.

  At least she kept her voice down.

  “It won’t be anything safe,” Rat cautioned us, but it would be something to distract me from the phantom feel of Puzzle’s slippery heart thumping in my fist. Scratchy plastic weave covered that sensation nicely as I lifted and pushed at bags with Scarecrow, looking for something out of place.

  I pulled at the bottommost bag, and Rat skittered sharply back. Bingo. Scarecrow and I hooked our hands into the bottom, lifted as best we could, and peeked underneath.

  A girl stared back at us. A woman. College age, I figured. Pretty, in a Barbie doll blonde-and-top-heavy kind of way. She didn’t exactly stare at us. Her eyes were half-lidded, like she’d been drugged. From shoulders to ankles, she was wrapped in green plastic tarp, with her hands sticking out the back. Her wrists were handcuffed behind her, and chains wound through the handcuffs. I saw chains on her ankles, and a lot of irregular lumps under the tarp looked like more chains. She was gagged, but instead of cloth like I’d expect, a metal bit kept her teeth and lips apart. And after all that, she’d been pinned under these bags.

  “We can’t leave her like this. We need to rescue her,” Scarecrow whispered.

  Rat tugged on one of his ears, torn. “It will throw us right into the middle of something ugly again, but you’re right. We can’t just leave her.”

  I leaned my head in closer. “Can you hear me, Miss? Can you talk through that thing?” I asked her.

  That woke her up. Her eyes snapped open, and she looked at me, and then Scarecrow, and then Rat. None of us got more than two seconds, stared at by flat gray eyes with tiny dot pupils. Her lips curled around the thing in her mouth. That coy, flirty smile didn’t fit. Neither did the way she dismissed us immediately, searching around us and past us for whatever she wanted to look at. She twisted an inch in her chains, and I glanced down at her grasping hands. They fit the claws on her fingertips just fine.

  “Forget it. This is none of our business, and I’m not going to be stupid enough to mess with it,” I decided, shoving the bag back down. Scarecrow accepted that, sinking back into place against the wall of the truck’s bed.

  Behind her, I saw a building go past on the side of the freeway. One of those low, inscrutable block buildings you got at the edge of towns. Then, a furniture outlet store. The truck crossed an intersection without stopping, and buildings surrounded us on all sides. We’d arrived somewhere, and somewhere close to civilization from the looks of it.

  We were still lost. We were just lost in suburbia. Rows and rows of little brick houses, shopping centers, and intersections just big enough to have stoplights. All the streets had names like ‘Evergreen’ or ‘Southlane.’ We could be outside any big city anywhere, and there’d be no way to tell.

  The truck turned into the parking lot of a motel, the only car there. With a little bump, we slid to a stop in a parking spot. Scarecrow and I flattened ourselves tighter as the driver got out, slammed his door, and walked around the corner into the motel’s office. I grabbed Scarecrow’s wrist, Rat latched onto her ankle, and we all three crawled over the back of the truck and marched good and fast to the opposite corner of the bent building. Planting my back against the brick wall, I let out a sigh. We were out of that.

  We were. The driver came back out of the motel and didn’t give us a second glance as he climbed into the bed of his pickup truck. Leaf filled bags rustled as he pawed around under them, and the shape he pulled out and slung over his shoulder was obviously the chained up young woman wrapped in even more tarp. She didn’t struggle as he carried her into Room 18.

  I felt faint pressure on my foot, and then a much firmer drag as Rat caught the hem of my skirt. When he’d climbed up to the level of my hip, I turned and walked out of the parking lot to stand on the sidewalk and stare at the street.

  “We’re near your home, Miss Mary, but I don’t know how to get you there. The way should be obvious, and it’s not. I think it’s closed to you.”

  I knew how to get home.

  I crossed the street, and as a minor miracle Scarecrow seemed to already understand crosswalks and stoplights. At least, she didn’t stray, sticking close while I crossed and crossed again. Peaceful Candy Store. Yeah, that’d do.

  I couldn’t recall ever being in a store that just sold candy before. How many types of candy were there to sell? Apparently, more than I’d ever dreamed. The whole store was painted white. Racks of plastic tubes dispensed taffy. Did anyone eat that much taffy? Little plastic statues under the counter’s display glass must have been made of chocolate. I honestly did not recognize a single name on the chocolate bar rack.

  “Hey, welcome to candy heaven. They should have named this place that. I don’t know why you’re still wearing your Halloween costume, but you are so cute in it!” the woman behind the counter gushed.

  “Grab some of the chocolate bars,” I whispered to Scarecrow. I was betting she’d ignore Scarecrow like Joseph did.

  Well, not quite, but close enough. “That toy is amazing. Japanese, right? Imported? And the pet rat is so cute!” the clerk gushed some more.

  I had to make some pretense of this. “What’s a divinity?” I asked, pointing past the glass cover of the counter. It was a good question. Were those little white cubes cookies or brownies or what? They looked like they’d been dusted with donut sugar.

  “Really hard to make,” the young woman bubbled. “Even if you make them wrong they’re so sweet you won’t care. We have to bake them ourselves, and they’re never the same twice. You want one, but don’t try feeding it to your rat. He’ll go into a diabetic coma. I’m serious, not joking.”

  “I’ll have to go get some money before I can try, but maybe I will!” I said. That seemed like a good enough reason to bow out. I stared at the little white blocks over my shoulder while I slipped back out the door.

  Scarecrow, subtle as a lump of wood, was already standing right outside holding two handfuls of candy bars. She must have grabbed them and walked right out. Well, no arguing with success, and I didn’t know how
to shoplift either. I at least pulled her around the side of the building so I wasn’t visible through the glass before I grabbed the haul out of her hands. I sat down against the wall to rip one open.

  This stuff wasn’t even American. There were umlauts in the name, and one of those cursive ‘S’s. Eh. Chocolate was chocolate. I tore off a big bite with my teeth.

  Okay, chocolate was not just chocolate. This stuff was rich. It tasted sweet and chocolaty and creamy on the tongue like no chocolate bar I’d ever eaten. I chewed and swallowed, took another big bite, and when I’d swallowed that, shoved the rest of the bar into my mouth and tore open another. My mouth drowned in this chocolate taste, and I didn’t care. It tasted good, yeah. Best candy I’d ever had by a mile. Who cared?

  I threw the half-eaten bar down on the sidewalk. I threw all the bars down, and pushed myself back to my feet. That had been stupid. Gorging on stolen candy bars wasn’t going to kill my story.

  “Miss Mary?” Rat asked with exactly the right anxious tone, considering what he’d just seen me do.

  “Shut up, Rat,” I ordered.

  He shut up. Scarecrow followed me back across the street twice. Why was I bothering with street lights? There was hardly any traffic.

  Nothing seemed to have changed in the motel parking lot. I angled across it towards room 18, and as I got closer I saw it. A dark line along the edge told me the door wasn’t quite closed. I pushed the door open and stepped inside.

  We hadn’t been gone long, and things had happened in a hurry. A lot of them had happened on the bed, then moved off it. At least, the sheets were twisted up and scattered around the bed, and the pillows had been thrown across the room. Most of the chains were still on the bed. Of the chains that weren’t, some had left visible dents where they’d hit the walls. Most importantly, the driver and his captive had disappeared. There wasn’t even any blood. If there had been, I’d have smelled it. I knew that smell now.

 

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