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117 - The Murder Plague: Caretaking, Part 3 of 3

Broadcast on:
15 Jan 2011
Audio Format:
other

Part 3 of 3

 

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Tonight, after a brush with death, Harm Carter briefly enjoys a family reunion.

I want some answers, where is Ruby, where is she, I didn't Joe Marcus and you, is that god damn smith, follow me again, kill me, kill me now. Who really needs to read anymore, Flashpulp, available on iTunes or download a dose today at Skinner.FM. Welcome to Flashpulp, episode 117. Tonight, we present The Murder Plague, caretaking, part 3 of 3. I'll be back. Sunday is gloomy, my hours are stumbling, here is the shadows I live with are stumbling. Flashpulp is an experiment in broadcasting fresh pulp stories in the modern age, three to ten minutes of fiction brought to you Monday, Wednesday and Friday evenings. Tonight, after a brush with death, harm Carter briefly enjoys a family reunion. The Murder Plague, caretaking, part 3 of 3. Written by JRD Skinner, art and narration via popinacs and audio produced by Jessica May. My relationship with my daughter Rebecca had long been rocky, our grief at Kate's death had carried us down two very different paths, but they had both ended at a similar destination. I chose to blame myself and she did the same, following it up with a kind of verbal lashing that only a 13-year-old with a justifiable excuse can lay down. Oh, there's nothing I could have done to stop the cancer, but I'd finished the burial with a two-week attempt to climb out of my depression on a ladder fashioned from vintage moolow bottles, and Becky was left a fend for herself. The thing is, I didn't really notice the resentment until I'd grown tired of waking up with a case of what my paw used to call the Irish Blue. I'd been too embarrassed of my condition to let Rebecca witness much of my stumbling, and when I finally decided to engage in a little sobriety, I'd found my girl was no longer the princess I'd knew. She became a fiery crusader for something akin to the resurrection of the temperance movement, blamed me for the decadence of capitalism, and began to spend more and more time with a new friend she'd met who felt likewise, after her own father had beaten her mother into a six-month-of-physical rehabilitation. After release from the hospital on the proceeds of her divorce, the woman and her daughter had relocated into a neat white two-story house, and it was there that Becky had spent most of her slumber parties and the majority of her growing up. It wasn't easy to spend half a decade feeling as if I was being compared to a rage-happy poker-wielding wife-beater, but it certainly kept me largely sober. It was especially tough, as Miss Robinson, the survivor, was an abnormally nice lady. She often sent my wayward daughter home with cookies, and they always tasted as if they were sugared by pixies and baked-in sunshine. When I decided I needed a week at the cabin, Rebecca had required no convincing to cold diner to ask her mother. Before I left, I'd formulated a plan to hopefully buy back some of the Robins' esteem, with the gift of a handsome grandfather clock purchased at an antique store I was familiar with along my route. I'd been so eager, I'd made the stop on my way in, and a monster had sat in the back of the explore for the length of my sabbatical. Unfortunately, upon my return I'd encountered the results of Hitchcock's, and the would-be heirloom passed out of my hands and into someone's backyard pole, along with the rest of my stolen truck. My four-hour walk to the Robinson's house had been quiet, however, as that ten-year-old who'd made off with my vehicle seemed the last person, other than myself, ridiculous enough to venture out after dark during a homicidal apocalypse. The march had given me plenty of time to think. If she was infected, Rebecca would eventually attempt to kill me. She might even if she was healthy. If there was some chance that I could subdue her, then find a way to keep her alive by force-beating, but if she was sick, I'd become sick too, assuming I wasn't already. What if she was fit and fine, and I accidentally contaminated her? What if she was already dead? One of the main things they'd taught me in my army days was not to wander around shouting hello. I'd managed to explore the entirety of the Robinson's main floor before I discovered Rebecca, standing at the head of the flight of stairs that led to the second. At first, she stayed at the top, and I remained at the bottom. "Hello, Dad." "Hi. I missed you." "Are you okay? Where's Dina?" "I'm fine. Have you been to the basement?" "No." I hadn't flipped on any switches while conducting my search, and the only light was directly above her on her landing. The shadows obscured her face. "Are you sure you're all right?" "Where are the Robins?" "I missed you too." She brushed back her hair and smiled. She hadn't smiled at me in five years. I had that cough to cover that I was tearing up. The cabin, too. It was a bit surprising, actually. I was thinking maybe in the spring you could take me up to open it with you. "Oh, I longed for that shack, and I'd just left that morning. It seemed like a lifetime ago, but it was actually at least five, two which had ended in my own self-defense. I was thinking of what I'd had to do to my cook, Katarina, specifically, and I recall selfishly wishing I could grab a pecky, permanently borrow a car and head back into the hills." "Remember when we used to go fishing, Dad?" She asked, her feet dipping down a step. "Hmm, of course I do ragamuffin," I replied. I could also recollect my discovery of George Hernandez earlier in the evening. He'd been hanged dead with the contents of his own tackle-box. "We should get out of here now," I continued. "Things aren't safe. We can drive up to-night, grab some supplies on the road, and bury ourselves and snow up at the lodge. We can deal with what's left of the world after the melt." She took another step, excited and beaming. "Sure. We don't need to go shopping, though," she replied. "I've got plenty of supplies, in the basement." That was the last I could take. She'd made it that far without me. She'd have to continue to do so, at least for a little while. "Okay, great. I'll go check on those and be right back." I bolted for the door. There was no other option. She was infected. Oh, I could stay and somehow continuously talk my way out of whatever death traps she'd concocted in the basement, all the while trying not to think too hard on what exactly she'd done to the house's other occupants, but in the end I'd only become as sick, and that wasn't a situation I could accept. I might be able to forgive her if you are intentional murders, but I wouldn't be able to forgive myself. After a few blocks, I realized she hadn't bothered to chase me. Really, it saddened me somehow. It took me six hours to walk home, the majority of which was spent swinging between elation at Becky's continued survival and utter despair at our predicament. It took another two hours to finally clean up the mess I'd left in the kitchen. I dug Katarina a shallow grave under the rising sun, took a shower, locked the doors, turned on the alarm, and bolded myself to sleep. Flashpulp is presented by http colon slash slash skinner dot FM, and is released under the Canadian Creative Commons attribution non-commercial 2.5 license. Text and audio commentaries can be sent to skinner at skinner dot FM, or the voicemail line at 206-338-2792, but be aware that they may appear in future flashcast. Many thanks to Wood of Highland of Wood for the intro bumper. You can find their podcast at bothersomethings.com. And thanks to you for listening. If you enjoyed the show, tell your friends. [Music]