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116 - The Murder Plague: Caretaking, Part 2 of 3

Broadcast on:
14 Jan 2011
Audio Format:
other

Part 2 of 3

 

Find the full text at http://skinner.fm

 

Tonight, Harm Carter is forced to make a sudden stop, during the apocalypse.

[music] Welcome to Flashpump episode 116. Tonight, we present The Murder Plague, caretaking, Part 2 of 3. This episode is brought to you by Dancing Ella's Words. Enjoy the cream of Viennese culture, but without the jet lag, or the TSA growth down. Find her work at http/dancingella.blogspot.com [music] Some day it blew me, my hours are stumbled out. Give it the shadows I live with are stumbled out. [music] [music] [music] [music] Dad, why is Mr. Runken that machine, Dad? Dad, what's wrong? Dad, I'm scared. [music] Who really needs to read anymore? Flashpump, available on iTunes or download a dose today at Skinner.fm. [music] Flashpump 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, Harm Carter is forced to make a sudden stop during the apocalypse. The Murder Plague, caretaking, Part 2 of 3, written by J.R.D. Skinner, Art and Narration Biopoponix, an audio produced by Jessica May. [music] [music] I was three blocks shy of getting on the highway when it struck me. A break? Well, to be fair, it ricocheted off the passenger side door. I'd been turning at a corner and the action on the cross street had been hidden from me by the darkness and a row of poorly maintained hedges. Slab wasn't the only thing to impact the car either. Its target was close behind. His shorts were billowing, and his t-shirt looked as if it had been designed by an unstable bonobo. But there's something pathetic and madly enduring, but the way a ten-year-old can plaster his pudgy face across a window that you just won't see when a grown man does the same. The woman behind him, the irate logber, came pumping down the street, her legs short but vigorous, and her arms extended in a way that made it clear she was on a mission to strangle. Collecting himself, the lad yanked at the handle and hopped into the passenger seat. In response, I gunned the explorer's engine. I wasn't considering where we were going, I just wanted to put some distance between my passenger and a garabi. There's something off-putting about seeing any child out after dark, and this was my first taste of basic violence on the open street. For the umpteenth time that night, I was shaken. The problem with a virus that turns everyone around you into a homicidal lunatic is that there's never really a moment to relax. Well, I mean, one of the problems. I took a left, then a right, then a left, just to be sure that Chokist wasn't going to make a horror film villain's sudden reappearance out of the shadows. Then I paused at a red light. I turned to my fair and asked his name. Tobias, sir, he replied. I've always been a sucker for a civil tongue. Well, Tobias, did you happen to know your intended throttler? I asked. Yes, she's my oldest sister. I nodded, my brain running over the possibilities of where I might drop him off. I'd seen the local fire department in action recently, or, at least what was left of them, so I wasn't keen to entrust him to their ax happy hands. I'd also guess that the police were likely just as badly off, but with guns. Before I could summon the wits to ask him if he had any family who wouldn't murder him, his face dropped and tears began to dampen his vulgarly colored tea. He thrust out his arms in a simple gesture I'd seen hundreds of times from Rebecca when she was a little girl. Physics has yet to calculate the force of gravitation that a child in need can generate on a heart, even a heart like the one propping up an old roughing such as myself. "Come now," I said. I reached across the console with a hug. Later into things, I met a woman who'd set up her car as if she'd had engine trouble. She'd go so far as to get some passing fool to stop and stick his head under the hood. Then she'd slam it down on them and finish their job with a flat-heads screwdriver. After stuffing the poor schmuck in a nearby culvert, she'd roll their gelopy into a tree gully across the road, wipe her bumper clean, and start the whole process over again. When I asked her, at gunpoint, how she could possibly explain such a thing, she told me it was because she was sure they'd all intended on making off with the aqua nissan hatchback. Oddly, that was exactly my intention. My point, however, is that even despite the complex paranoia that is brought on by the plague, children are simple, and they seek simplicity. Two things happened at the same time. The image of my neighbor's youngest came to mind, her fingers entangled in the fishing line I'd found her father strangled with, and I felt Tobias's weight shift awkwardly in my hold. My ribs suddenly feeling exposed, I pushed the boy away, unbuckled my belt for freer access, or possibly due to a sudden attack of claustrophobia, and in my sudden need for space accidentally dropped my foot solidly onto the gas. As the acceleration pushed him into his seat, I identified his weapon of choice, a thick Swiss army knife, the longest of the blades extended. He was either rusty or blood encrusted. I slammed on the bricks, hoping it might stun him into dropping the thing, barely winced as he bounced off the glove compartment, then he came at me over the gear shift. What could I do? Kill him? As I struggled with his raised hand, the crude string of suggestions he made regarding my heritage made it pretty clear he wouldn't stop unless I did. After a moment of consideration, I made a hard choice. I stepped out of the car. Well, I suppose that sounds a little more elegant than the reality. That popped open the door and fell out backwards as the explorer continued on at a power walker's pace. Rather than chase me onto the road, little Toby decided he rather liked the feel of the steering wheel. It was stop and go at first, but after a moment he gained in confidence, and started to swing the truck into a wide turn. He didn't seem terribly concerned about the well manicured front yard he tore up along the way. I began to run. It was a near thing, but I lost him after a blimey, bold through a row of mahogany-stained pool fencing, and landed himself in the shallow end of someone's "a sea-ment pond". Still, I didn't stop moving until I'd reached the babysitter's house. 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. ♪ Sunday is gloomy, my hours are stumbled ♪ ♪ Here is the shadows I live with are stumbled ♪ (upbeat music) [MUSIC PLAYING]