Darkest Days: A Southern Zombie Tale

Home > Other > Darkest Days: A Southern Zombie Tale > Page 6
Darkest Days: A Southern Zombie Tale Page 6

by Layton, James J.


  Placing the receiver to his ear, he said, “Hello. This is McDonalds’.”

  Cara’s voice sweetly rolled out of the earpiece. “I just wanted to say goodnight.”

  Bryant’s face brightened with the realization that he was speaking to her again. “Thank you, but why are you up so late? We’ve got school tomorrow.”

  “I know but I couldn’t sleep.” She sounded excited but slightly melancholy.

  “So, what were you doing?” He asked, curious for any knowledge about her.

  “Listening to The Cure.” She said with a certain amount of relish.

  “Really, why The Cure?”

  “I just feel like listening to The Cure.” She paused.

  Before she could say more, a shout came from the manager’s office. “Some of us want to go home, lover boy!”

  “Listen, I’ve got to go. I’ll see you at school tomorrow.” They exchanged quick goodbyes and Bryant performed a short victory dance. “She loves me. She loves me.” He repeated in a singsong fashion as he went back to his appointed tasks. He pointed at Robert and continued singing, even though the grill worker had flipped him off. “Your middle finger doesn’t change the fact she loves me.”

  Robert laughed. “Next time, I’ll tell the boss to fire you.”

  ***

  After school the next day, Bryant waited by the exit to the student parking lot looking for Cara. The lovely girl slipped into view and he called her over. A few passing students looked his way but kept going, seeing who he was addressing. Cara dodged in between passing cheerleaders and paused in front of him. “Hey.” She waited for his response.

  “Hey.” He whispered back “I need to pick up some groceries and I was wondering if you’d like to come with me.”

  “That sounds exciting.” She said in a monotone.

  Bryant smiled and tried to determine whether that was expressed in sarcasm or earnestly; her voice always sounded the same. “It’s not exciting but I would just like to have you with me.”

  She smiled back. “I’d love to.”

  Bryant escorted her out to his truck. Standing under the overcast sky, he brushed her hair back. “I feel bad.”

  “Why?”

  “Normal dates are an impossibility.” He shook his head. “I just don’t have the money to take you to the theater in Tuscaloosa. I don’t have the gas to drive anywhere. I can’t provide you with the standard boyfriend experience.”

  Cara reached out and took his hand. “Don’t care about that. I just like being around you.”

  He pulled her close in an embrace. “Why do you like me?”

  She buried her face in his chest and whispered. “I fell for you when you saw straight through me.”

  “What do you mean?” He leaned back and looked her in the eyes.

  She shyly smiled. “I don’t want to say it.” The girl stroked his arm. “You just knew so much about me without even knowing me.” She felt like crying with relief but restrained herself. She had bottled up all the feelings for so long that the vanished weight of being alone in the world made her giddy.

  Bryant just held her for a minute, oblivious to the stares of commuters passing on the way to their cars. When she had sufficiently recovered, Bryant opened the door for her and they drove to the grocery store.

  The couple found themselves pushing a cart under fluorescent lights, between walls of canned goods. Cara grabbed a small pack of ground beef from a refrigerated bunker but Bryant shook his head. “Get the family pack. I can wrap it in smaller chunks and freeze it. It’s cheaper by the pound that way.”

  Cara smiled. “That’s a good idea.” She replaced it and picked up a larger pack wearing a bright red sticker reading: 20 cents cheaper per pound! “Who taught you that trick?”

  Bryant examined a tray of boneless chicken. “I figured it out myself.”

  “Clever boy!” She cooed. “I think that deserves a kiss.” She leaned in and quickly pecked him on the lips, unsure of how far a public display of affection could go in a small town grocery store.

  Bryant grinned, struggling to come up with something witty. “If I knew talking about raw meat got you hot, I’d have brought you here a lot sooner.” As soon as the words escaped his mouth, he felt dumb for having made such a statement. Cara paid it no mind though, and he felt relieved.

  During the tour of the produce department, Bryant picked up a flimsy plastic bag and began stuffing it with loose mushrooms from a black plastic bin. He excitedly asked Cara, “Have you ever had these things fried?”

  She playfully remarked, “You Southerners fry everything.”

  “Because it tastes good.” He hugged her waist.

  “Can you cook?” She asked trying to imagine him behind a stove.

  “Come home with me and find out.” He gave her a sly wink.

  His offer was enticing. “I’m not sure.” She hesitated. “My parents don’t know where I am and the weather’s supposed to be terrible.”

  “Well, if you must, just know that my fried mushrooms and delicious chicken parmagiana will go to waste.” He stuck his lower lip out in an exaggerated pout.

  She put a hand on each of his smooth cheeks and kissed him again. “I can’t resist that obviously sincere expression. I’ll come with you.”

  While checking out at the register, Cara thought about the simple act of grocery shopping in a new light. She felt a little more grown up, a little more independent, and a little more like a mature woman with her lover. Of course, she and Bryant had not consummated anything, but being a lover was not all about sex.

  As they were driving away from town, the sky darkened. When they reached his driveway, the first far off rumble of thunder menaced. As they pulled plastic bags from the bed of his truck, the first drops of rain fell out of the deep gray clouds. Cara squealed as she ran inside, two bags clenched in each hand. Bryant called after her. “It’s just water!” Then he ran up the cinder-block steps, his arms full of bags as well.

  Inside, the pair heard a sudden increase in raindrops hitting the roof. “Just in time.” Bryant congratulated himself as each individual drop multiplied to become a torrent.

  Cara looked around the dim trailer and asked, “Can we get some light?”

  Bryant reached out and flipped an off-white switch, cursing when no light sprang forth. “This happens all the time.” He explained. “It’ll take forever to come back on. They’ll fix the outages in town first.”

  Ever practical, he reached into a kitchen drawer and pulled out a lighter. “The stove is gas, so I can still cook. I also have some candles and a lamp for light.”

  In between flashes of approaching lightning and howling winds, Bryant placed two candles on the kitchen table and set an old fashioned hurricane lamp by the sink casting its warm glow over the nearby stove-top.

  Together they prepared the meal. Bryant baked the breaded chicken while Cara boiled the noodles. One blazing eye on the stove held a saucepan with simmering marinara and another eye with a pan containing oil for the appetizers. Accompanied by the sounds of batter-covered mushrooms and popping oil, Cara and Bryant stole amorous glances at each other.

  She was so physically attracted to him that she feared that she might sleep with him that very night. Despite her body’s preparation for physical love, she knew that the risk was too great. Lacking any kind of contraceptive and surmising that Bryant would not have any on hand either, she debated broaching the topic of purchasing some with him. Truthfully, she did not trust condoms and remembered reading somewhere that prophylactics had a thirty percent failure rate.

  Upon the successful completion of cooking, both teenagers sat down at the table with delicious smelling dishes resting in front of them. Bryant picked up a mushroom with his fork and dipped it into the marinara on his chicken. “They’re really good like this. You should try it.”

  Cara gave a half-hearted smile. “I don’t really like eating fungus.”

  “That sounds so sexy when you say it.” Bryant chewed quickl
y and stabbed another. “They have to be eaten first because they cool off so fast.”

  She watched him relish every bite of his fried mushrooms and finally gave in. “You really want me to eat one, don’t you?”

  He shrugged. “More for me.”

  She picked up her fork and speared a small one. “Okay, are you happy now?”

  “I’m neutral on this one. I love you no matter what you eat.” He paused, shocked by his own words.

  “What did you say?” Cara quietly asked in stunned disbelief.

  “I said ‘I love you’.” He sounded unsure of himself. He repeated it with more confidence a second later. “I love you.”

  She leaned forward and brushed his lips with the very tips of her fingers. “Wow.” She could not manage to recover. Her mouth opened and then closed like a fish struggling to breathe. Every time words came to her, the traitorous mouth rushed to cooperate, fumbling every utterance. Finally, the lips, tongue, and jaw synched and she could articulate again. “I can’t believe this. How can you know you love me so soon?”

  Bryant set his utensil down and looked into her eyes. “You can’t ask me how I know I love you. I just do. I know it reflexively, the same way I breathe the air or know when I’m sleepy. I just know.”

  She reached out and held his hand. “I’m not going to say it right now, but I will. It’s still too soon for me.” She knew at that moment deep down she loved him. Being in love frightened her to the point that she did not want to admit it to him. However, looking at his innocent face, she could not doubt her feelings.

  Bryant let fear rob him of his volition. Instead of leaning forward and kissing her, he sat petrified. She had not reciprocated his statement. No matter how empathetic he was to the enormity of what he wished her to say, he still could not help but feel hurt.

  Slowly, Cara mustered her courage. She had engaged in battles of wits with people twenty years her senior. She had faced down schoolyard bullies who had singled her out for being different. Even with her inclination towards confrontation, she was frightened by what was about to happen.

  “What if I said it back?” She asked in the dead silence of the room.

  “I would be very happy,” he meekly spoke, “but I don’t want you to say it because I did and you feel guilty.”

  She reached out and took his hand. “I don’t do things because of other people. I do them for myself.” She gave a brief squeeze and decided that it was time. “I love you.” Those three powerful words hung in the air. She thought to herself as a postscript to that statement, “I will sleep with him, not tonight, but soon.”

  ***

  A day later, Cara had her mother drop her off at the Gutherie Smith Park. Jean Creed obliged, not knowing that her daughter had engineered the outing so she could meet a boy. A wooden fence composed of rounded slats bordered the narrow entrance road which forked, creating an extended loop through the park. From the air, the automobile’s path resembled a teardrop. A thick mixture of hardwoods and pines surrounded the road, while on the inside of the loop sat four baseball fields, a basketball court, four tennis court, and a large playground. The Fayette airport resided adjacent to the park and even donated the old runway for parking. The long stretch of disused tarmac only ran for half a mile, since the airport never landed anything bigger than a Cessna. The man-made lake, however, stole most of the attention. A walking trail wound its way through the woods and then around the calm body of water. A red gazebo rested out on a small island with a strip of land (only wide enough for two people walking abreast) connecting it to the shore. Driving around the park, one saw scattered pavilions hidden on the edges of the forest.

  The Caprice’s air conditioning hummed on the lowest setting as Cara looked in the mirror. Normally, she never wore makeup but today she had experimented with a small amount: She had applied a light coat of foundation and a natural shade of lipstick. No blush, no mascara, no eyeliner. She already felt too “dolled up”. She brushed her hair, even though it hung straight down in its normal style. She had shed her jacket but still kept it close at hand in case she needed her makeshift security blanket. She had even convinced her mother to take her shopping for some clothes. She had picked out what she wore now, dark blue jeans that hugged her hips and a snug black tank top exposing just a little of her midriff. None of the changes made her feel more attractive though. They made her feel like a sell-out. The way she looked at the moment, she could have passed for a popular girl.

  Cara spied Bryant’s truck parked by the tennis courts. She directed her mother to slow down and let her out. She needed to exit before they reached the vehicle. “I’ve got to give her time to get out of sight.” She thought. She did not want Bryant meeting her family yet. Even the day she had called for a ride home from Bryant’s trailer, she had not introduced them. She had waited by the road despite his protestations.

  Mrs. Creed spoke, barely registering her daughter’s presence. “I’ll be back in two hours. That should give me enough time to take care of my errands.”

  Cara gave a brief intense look at her mother, wondering about her adjustment to the town. Shopping, bills, Tupperware parties, PTA. Maybe it was just a front; maybe her mother actually enjoyed the slower pace of life. She shook her head and pulled the chrome colored handle, popping the door open. The heat rushed upon Cara as she stepped out of the Chevrolet and toward the brown idling pickup.

  Jean Creed mashed the accelerator, speeding the Caprice over a speed bump and causing a loud jangle of bouncing automotive parts as the shocks vainly tried to absorb the impact. Distracted, she did not see the young man exit his truck and walk toward her daughter.

  Cara turned at the loud noise coming from her parents’ vehicle. When the car kept going, she assumed everything was alright and turned back to her goal. Bryant already stood in front of her, appearing like a magician’s trick. Oddly, his face showed surprise instead of hers.

  She realized that he had never seen her dressed that way. Suddenly, her stomach fluttered with butterflies as she fought how she wanted him to react. He needed to observe the work that she had put in on her appearance, or at least acknowledge it. If he did not notice, how much attention did he really pay her? At the same time, she held to a romantic notion of Bryant not caring what she looked like, because he liked “her for her”.

  Bryant gazed at her with wonderment. She possessed a natural beauty, her complexion unblemished and her skin a light cream color. The features of her face combined to form an intelligent but vulnerable countenance. Now, with her trace amounts of makeup and revealingly cut clothing, she appeared ravishing.

  He reached out and wordlessly pulled her to him. Her fingers slid around him and gripped him under his shoulder blades. His hands met over the exposed skin of her lower back hovering just above the belt line.

  “You’re beautiful.” Bryant did not feel capable of poetry or eloquence, but what he lacked in flowery words or cultivated vocabulary, he made up for in sincerity. In that respect, his limited lexicon served him amicably.

  Cara leaned up on the balls of her feet and kissed him. He returned the gesture with more force, and then broke their embrace to point through the trees. “There’s a walking trail over there. Would you like to take a stroll around the lake?”

  She nodded.

  The path consisted of loose sand wedged in between huge spreads of fallen pine needles and undergrowth. Thin streams of sunlight filtered through the foliage canopy overhead. Birds chirped and small animals rustled through the leaves, but the couple did not talk. Finally, Cara broke the silence. “Alabama has the most trees of any place I’ve ever seen.” The statement sounded lame. She lowered her eyes hoping Bryant did not see how blank her mind had gone.

  “Where else have you been?” He asked.

  “Not many places outside New York City. I’ve been to New Jersey, a little of Pennsylvania. Other than that, just the places that we drove through on the way down.”

  Bryant laughed. “Then you’ve seen a good
bit of the East coast”

  “Actually, I spent the ride reading until I got car sick and I also slept a lot.” She replied.

  He reached out and held her hand as they walked on. The trees thinned out and the lake appeared before them. Its murky water lapped at the steep bank as a small family of ducks paddled around a covered bridge. A small creek draining away from the larger body of water passed under the bridge and snaked away into the forest.

  Bryant tilted his head back, observing the clear sky. “Looks like all those clouds moved on.”

  Cara gave a cursory glance and changed subjects. “How are you with your parents?”

  Bryant jerked back in surprise. Quickly recovering, he spoke. “Well, this is supposed to be a pleasant afternoon and I wouldn’t want to bring you down.”

  Cara stroked the back of his hand. “I want to know.”

  He gave a quick summary in emotionless tones. “My father’s dead. My mother’s an alcoholic. I don’t see her anymore, except once a week I’ll help her pick up some groceries. I mainly keep the truck.”

  Cara had originally wanted to complain about her parents but knew her jibes were trivial in comparison. Feeling like a heel for drudging up his pain-filled memories, she turned away, looking down the trail. A figure walked toward them smiling as if he recognized them both.

  Bryant spotted him and waved. Maybe the visitor would distract her from the subject of his parents. He did not feel comfortable thinking about them when he was alone, much less with a girl he was still trying to win over.

  “Hey, Bryant.” A young man facing them greeted. “Hey Cara.” He gave her a brief nod.

  “Who is this?” She asked her boyfriend.

  “This is Robert. I work with him at Micky D’s.”

  Bryant’s coworker chimed in. “I’m on the grill and your boy here is a cashier because he can’t keep up with me.”

 

‹ Prev