Sunspot I. Finally, after years of dogged pursuit, Harris and his thugs tracked Rachel and me to The Red Log-Cabin Restaurant in the Canadian Rockies. I was nervously awaiting the return of Rachel,
who had been gone for hours, when he arrived one late afternoon in July, the sun bleeding
through spiraling towers of smoke from the two-week old forest fires that threatened this
forested sanctuary. I had figured before I saw Harris that some group had set the fires,
for each fire had been started within a twenty mile radius of the restaurant, and each
fire burned toward the middle where Rachel and I had lived in an aluminum-gray trailer for
a couple of years just down the road from the restaurant. The encroaching fires fueling
her fears, Rachel had dreamt for seven straight nights immediately before the encounter
with Harris that she was being consumed by the fires of Hell and--delusional, I
thought--had mentioned several times that the Devil was near. Yet, I had made the decision
a couple days before the old man walked through the restaurant door that my beautiful but
neurotic girlfriend and I would wait the fires out. A day before Harris came, the fires
tightly ringed the area in what Rachel morbidly referred to as "a merry dance of
death." Harris and I went back a long ways. Years ago, following a Following his professional collapse, Abner Harris spiraled into suicidal depression, was committed to a psyche ward, and recovered instantly when a girl I had saved from possible death wrote him and named me as the betrayer. As I anticipated, his mind clearing, Harris acted swiftly. I had been spending a weekend at a beach hotel in Northern California when I received my death call. The phone rang at two am, and I knew it was the old man. "Youll pay for this, you little son of a bitch," he growled over the phone. I had been in bed with rising adult star Jenny Payload, watching old Frankenstein and Wolfman movies between bouts of frenzied sex. In fact, I had just entered her for the umpeenth time when Harris called. Still the measure of a man, I was outraged. But knowing since childhood that the old man always fulfilled his promises, having no desire then to take another life, I packed my bag and silently slipped away at dawn, leaving Jenny and friends. (Jenny, you may remember, died of food poisoning ten years ago.) For the next seventeen years, a coward, I dodged this insidious man, several times finding courage and strength to use force to survive. Several years back, trapped one Winter night between cars in a Denver supermarket parking lot, while Rachel watched, I used my grandfathers knife to scar and blind the fiend, who stupidly came for me alone. In a blind rage, he was going to blow a hole in me with a sawed-off shotgun, but when I dropped to my knees and begged for mercy, he lowered his weapon and gave me my chance. In the freezing night air, I sprang at him like a snake. When I sliced his face, Harris squealed like a pig, dropped the gun, and then fell to the pavement, holding a hand over bleeding cheek and eye. Hopping into Rachels truck, I left quickly. But the old man proved to be resilient, and after a startlingly fast recovery, Harris and his gang continued the chase that took me across the country and back several times. Always managing to stay one or two weeks ahead, until our encounter in the restaurant, Rachel and I hadnt seen Harris for over two years. II. And now here he was, sure as Death. Sitting in a back booth, sipping black coffee and eating apple pie, I immediately recognized him: a tall, thin man with a pink, jagged scar on his left cheek and a patch over his right eye. Jesus, I mumbled to myself, this old fuck is gonna fry me. Rage over being chased having left me years ago, I inwardly trembled. I was a mouse. He seated himself in the booth next to the green
wooden screen door, the kind you see in old mountain lodges, and looked across the room
with his one good eye. Aside from the help, we were alone. I stopped eating and nervously
glanced back. Fighting panic, I told myself that Rachel would soon return from the market,
and things would be fine. A Now, in the restaurant, time stood still and the sun froze in the sky as the old man and I watched each other. Finally, he spoke. "Hello, Sunspot," he said in a gravely voice raspy from years of smoking. I swallowed hard and refused to blink. Then, grinning, he added, "Wheres the girl?" "Shes not here," I responded in a high-pitched voice, coolly as possible. I tried not to look afraid. "Where are your friends?" "Theyre around," he said. "Around?" "Youre not going anywhere if thats what you had in mind," he growled. Slowly, he rose from his table, looked out the latticed window, motioned with his right hand to someone in the front, and walked over to me, his black boots thudding on the wooden floor. "Why dont you have a seat?" I said rigidly, as he stood over my table, his hands thrust into the pockets of his blue jeans. He wore a red flannel shirt that resembled one Rachel had given him for Christmas years ago. "Dont mind if I do, Isaac," he replied, sliding into the booth and across from me. For nearly half an hour he studied me, smoking Camel after Camel, his one good smoke-colored eye boring into me. The air around us was blue with smoke, and I felt like gagging but restrained myself. "Gonna eat, kid?" he finally asked, smiling, pointing to my half-finished pie. "Yknow, I can fix your food." Laughter in his eye, he knew I feared him. Years of running will make any man afraid. "Not hungry," I answered. "Gonna drink your coffee?" he continued, nodding towards my cup. I shook my head. He was playing with me just as he had done when I was five and mom was still alive. "Not thirsty," I twittered. My heart beat rapidly, and I felt dizzy. "Wheres your girl?" he asked again. I didnt like the way he asked the question. "Not here," I replied. "Then what you gonna do, boy?" he taunted. "I dont know," I weakly replied. I figured I was going to die. Without Rachel, I hadnt the courage to stand up to this man. "No way out this time, Sunspot," the old man said, raising black bushy eyebrows and looking sorry for me. "Nope. No way," I muttered, my mind racing, "not this time." "Could be the end of the line for you," he said. "Could be," I whispered, dizzy with fear. I was near tears. Smiling, he paused, lit another cigarette, blew smoke into the air above me, and motioned for the waitress, an obese redhead named Martha, who had been standing behind the counter pretending not to notice. When she came over, Harris ordered a diet Pepsi and cherry pie a la mode. "Bring this boy a piece, too," he said, grinning. "And some Pepsi, too." He could smell my fear. I summoned the boldness to ask: "So where do we go from here?" The old man said nothing until the waitress
brought pie and Pepsi, and after taking a drink and a bite of pie, he looked straight at
me and then leaned forward, as if to whisper a secret, like he used to when I asked him a
stupid question about the planets and the sun. "Where we go from here, Sunspot,"
he replied, smiling, his teeth crooked and yellowed, "is that I give you one more
chance. Son, Ive actually enjoyed the hunt, the thrill of hunting down one of my
own, and My heart skipped several beats. "Say that again," I requested. "Just for old times sake," he said, "because Im an old softy." "One last chance?" I asked, breath coming in short bursts. "Its what I said, my beaming boy," the old demon rasped, "one last chance for you." I still felt light-headed. "So, what do I do?" I asked. "You head out that front door," he said, pointing to the front of the restaurant, "and take the path into the woods. Once you reach the old picnic area with the swings youre on your own again." "Thats all?" I asked, smelling a rat. "Thats all," he responded. "Now?" "Any time, Sunspot. You know what your momma always used to say, God rest her soul: no time like the present." My mother had died of food poisoning when I was in junior high. I knew at the time the old man had poisoned her but was afraid to tell anyone. II. Abe Harris stood and I,
Isaac, stood with him, and we slowly walked to the front door. Stepping outside into hot
suffocating air, the sun veiled by smoke, I stopped and studied the brown path, which
meandered for about one hundred yards, disappearing into smoke and trees. I knew that if I
could elude them until dusk they would never I glanced sideways at Harris, slightly stooped by age, and saw the three big men behind him. Theyd been with him for years. "Anytime, Sunspot," Harris said, lighting another Camel, inhaling, exhaling, and looking at the path. I paused, trying to figure this out. "You got a minute to disappear," he muttered, "and after that, if youre caught, Ill have one of these guys remove your head." Initially, I wondered if he were joking, then realized he was dead serious. Decapitation was something he had used in earlier years to even the score with people even from his own family. Wondering if Rachel were on her way, a crazy sinking feeling in my gut, I began jogging down the rutted path. In less than a minute I reached scraggly pines, but as I proceeded through the forest towards the picnic area, the air around me darkened, trees and smoke blocking sunlight. I moved forward until I came to the picnic area, which looked as it did years ago when I came with my father, when he was still the impoverished all-American Dad: it was simple and rustic, with a wooden table and benches to eat on, old iron swing set off to the right, and a fire pit ringed with big rocks to the left. The place was unbearably hot, and sweating I saw flames dancing through trees. Closing my eyes because of fine stinging ashes, I knew that I had seen something. Slowly forcing open my eyes, I glanced around the area; then I saw and knew that Harris design, expressed once through twisted movies, had reached its sickening apotheosis in the Canadian Rockies. On the far side of the campground, suspended in mid air, hung a tall, gorgeously proportioned nude woman. This is what the escape was about. Dumbly, reminded of early Christian paintings I studied in graduate school, I looked at the scene, a kind of crucifixion without a cross, smoke swirling around the body, flames in the trees behind her framing her head in a red and orange halo. Because the wisps of smoke circling her were slightly crimson, I had the impression of looking through a bloody prism. Though I couldnt clearly see her face, I knew who it had to be. My soul turned to lead, my blood to ice, and I imagined myself sinking into an oily pool. I looked up. Slight movement of her head and fluttering of her arms, almost a kind of grotesque dance, told me Rachel was alive. I drew closer, not wanting to touch the body, smelled blood mixed with smoke, and stopped less than thirty feet away. Feeling faint, I wasnt sure I wanted to go on. But I loved this woman, and so I cautiously stepped forward through building heat and toward the body. Even dying, I crazily thought, Rachel was hauntingly beautiful, her long, thick raven hair flowing down her back and over one shoulder to cover a small tattooed breast. Her arms hanging by her side, she now was mere feet away. Blood trickled from her mouth and threaded its way down her body between her breasts, and without feeling, almost knowing what I would see, I noticed a brown wooden pole shoved between her legs, the point penetrating deeply . The pole had been planted into the ground. Sick at heart, I recognized the artists touch, an unmistakable recreation of the scenes Harris used to finish his movies with. As her hair danced from a slight breeze, I looked at Rachel, who was bleeding to death internally. Pleadingly, her light extinguishing, she stared at me through glassy blood-shot eyes. She had been my hope and redemption. Without her, I had nothing. Seized by coughing, I doubled over, vomited, then forced myself to look back up. She kept her flickering eyes on me. Unable to speak, she slowly mouthed the words "Been waiting for you" and then, after several moments, "Help me." I drew near, not certain what to do, and put my hands on her hips; perhaps I was going to push her upward off the pole. She went rigid at my touch, exhaled violently, trembled, then slowly, slowly shut her eyes. I swear I felt, at that instant, just as I softly kissed her lips, her soul rush out of her. Deadened inside, I stepped back. For a time, I watched, waited, hoping her eyes would open, that Rachel would step down. Smoke burning my eyes and nostrils, I couldnt weep. Numbness spread into my jaw and down my arms as I thought of Harris men subduing this woman and, as she fought like a wildcat, ripping her clothes off, and then entering her again and again until they tired of the sport, held her down and shoved the pole inside her. "Oh, sweet Jesus," I exclaimed, finally dropping to my knees. "I cant help you, babe," I said. I willed myself to weep, found that I could not, wished myself in Hell. Kneeling, resigned, wisps of forest smoke swirling around me, I awaited my executioner, hoping that my final moment would be swift and painless. "Sweet, sweet Jesus," I said in a leaden monotone. It was then that I heard voices behind me and a piece of dry wood crack and the knowledge that I had been observed and was being approached snapped me out of my trance Angered that my woman had been taken from me, angered that I had contributed to this brutal death, angered that I had never really challenged my pursuer, I felt myself exploding from the waking, frightened dream I had inhabited for the last seventeen years. "Jesus wont help you now, son," said a voice I recognized as belonging to Harris. Hate creeping into my soul, I knew that the old devil had brought the others. "I see you found Rachel," he added. "Fuck you, Daddy," I said, rage pushing away fear. My hands folded in front of me, and I raised my head as I felt the sword placed at my neck. I waited in furious silence for the swing of death and sharp scalding pain that would release me into eternity. At that moment, I heard no sound, felt no smoke
or flame, sensed that with Rachel I hung suspended somewhere in eternal bliss, and then
became intensely aware that I existed as flesh and blood. I could feel my heartbeat and
the blood coursing through my veins. Jesus Fucking Christ, I silently screamed to myself,
I want to live. Just one more The suffocating smoke made the heat unbearable. Then, as I felt darkness slither into me, I heard singing of metal passing through air, the whoosh of death, signaling something sharp splitting space near me; I cringed, felt the executioners blade cut through flesh on the side of my neck and abruptly stop. After several moments, the sword was taken away,
leaving on my neck a huge and bleeding gash whose scar I carry to this day. At the same
time, like one possessed, I felt rage rush to the surface like lava pushing upward and
consciously forced it down. Silently, I vowed to kill the old man, even if he was my lone
surviving parent. I prayed Hiding rage, I turned my head all the way around and looked up at the old man, his one eye glaring upon me with the spent fury of a dying star. "Now were even," said Harris, and two of his men shifted positions behind him. I smiled. "I dont think so, old fuck," I said, slightly guttural. "Before Im through, Ill drink
your blood for dinner." The change in me had already begun. To these words, he smiled
and said nothing. The big guy standing behind HarrisMonk was his namewore the
blank, dazed stare of one who has just witnessed creations most gruesome spectacle.
At that moment, it occurred to me that I would like to eat "What goes around comes around, Sunspot," Monk said in a high-pitched voice, an idiot waxing philosophical. Monk reminded me of one of those fat priests from the monster movies of the 40s. (I would dismember him a year later.) "Sure does, Monkey," I muttered, smiling to myself. I knew he hated being called that. As Harris and his men slowly turned and walked through the smoke back through the woods, I remained kneeling. Surrounded by flames, feeling scorched, I closed my eyes, prayed to the darkness that rules this planet for the ability to carry out my design, knew without question that my final destination would be the Pit of Hell. The forest was growing darker. Then I opened my eyes to look at Rachel and try to remember what she had looked like when we first met in Las Vegas. If not for me, she likely would have died years ago, a sacrifice in one of my fathers twisted films. I knew that I could not leave her corpse to rot. Somehow, I would get her down and, in the fiery gloom, bury her in the Canadian Rockies. After I finished the undertakers task, I would devote my life to tracking the old man and his pack. A beast, I would exact upon him and whoever stood in my way a revenge so bloody, so diabolical that even the legions of Hell would shudder and turn away. ©2001 Rich Logsdon |
Send all comments on
poetry and fiction to the writers, they'd love to hear from you, just click on their name
and send mail.
All Rights Reserved By The Author! If You Want To Use Something You See Here, Write Them
And Ask!