Fishladder: A Student Journal of Art and Writing

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Fishladder: A Student Journal of Art and Writing Volume 12 Issue 1 Article 24 2014 Grand Valley State University Follow this and additional works at: http://scholarworks.gvsu.edu/fishladder Recommended Citation Crider, Aaron (2014) "," Fishladder: A Student Journal of Art and Writing: Vol. 12: Iss. 1, Article 24. Available at: http://scholarworks.gvsu.edu/fishladder/vol12/iss1/24 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by ScholarWorks@GVSU. It has been accepted for inclusion in Fishladder: A Student Journal of Art and Writing by an authorized administrator of ScholarWorks@GVSU. For more information, please contact scholarworks@gvsu.edu.

They were all dead. Killing them was part of the business. You had to get your hands dirty and bloody. There weren t many still in the business, but Gerald and Eliza had stayed in to pay the farm off. Even after everything in the world burned down, after the earth opened up and spilled out the rotten and mangled corpses of the dead after the mothers mourned their children, after the husbands buried their wives with a bullet to the brain the bankers, the sharks in suits, the leeches of money came calling for the mortgage payment on the farm. And so they picked the business back up. They only thing that changed was the livestock. The blood thinned with the water. Gerald wasn t sure if he was sweeping it up or just driving it into the already rotted floor. Eliza picked bits of skin off the table and scrubbed the bench and checked to see if the knives and shears were dry. She wiped her hand across her face. A smear of blood painted her gray and blackening cheek. Her slender arms creaked as she scrubbed with the hand brush. Blood sloshed to the floor. Gerald grunted and walked over with the mop. He pushed the pink, soapy square chunks of cheek and foot out the door. He walked back and took a floor broom from the closet. The handle, like the floor, was rotted. Everything seemed rotted. It was amazing the barn hadn t fallen down yet. Are we doing the right thing? Eliza said standing. She stretched her arms over her head. A loud popping noise ran up her spine. We re working to save the farm, ain t we? Gerald asked. Eliza shrugged and tossed a partial earlobe in the trash bin. She pushed the barn doors open and Gerald ran the broom across once more throwing any leftovers out onto the soil that was now tainted a crusty red from the constant cleanings. A haze draped over the farm. A white mist against the lightening skyline shrouded the farmhouse and fields leaving dark silhouettes. Gerald picked at a scab on his head. Does it ever make you sick, Gerry? You know, farming em? The farm don t run itself, Lizzy. And if the farm don t run we don t 47

Eliza held up her hand. I know. She tilted her head. The thin reeds of dark hair, the ones that had yet to fall out, fanned to the side like feathers. She looked thoughtfully at Gerald. Despite the rotted and torn look of both her clothes and body, Eliza looked beautiful in a dead sort of way. Gerald smiled and continued scratching. But do you? Gerald looked away and picked the scab until he felt the crust rip free and the small, wet trickle of thick blood run down his balding head. He flicked the scab into the grass and shook his head. He turned and limped back into the barn. Eliza watched him and imagined the smell of the rotting wood. She pictured the termite tunnels burrowed into the once pristine oak Gerald s great-grandfather had built it out of. Eliza closed her eyes and remembered what it had looked like before the Wave. It stood taller then, didn t lean like it did now. It had big red doors with white trimming. It looked like it had come out of Little House on the Prairie. She tried to picture Gerald walking out of the barn, only that it was no longer Gerald in grimy overalls with large patches she sewn into them. It was Michael Landon who walked out dressed in a red and white checkered shirt to match the barn and a pair of Levi jeans with brown cowboy boots and one of those gallon-type hats, one of the small ones. She saw the baby blue irises of his eyes, not the milky-white deadness of Gerald s, and thought he looked beautiful. Beautiful because he was alive. Beautiful because he wasn t like them. Eliza thought of the farm the way it was before everything was ripped out from under them. It was alive, bustling, moving on its own two legs. Had been since 1901. Thriving with barn animals, horses pulling plow blades behind them, chickens pecking at the ground looking for seed, goats chewing out wheat and crab grass that grew up to the edge of the fields; there were farmhands, black men with strong arms looking for a week or months worth of wages in Gerald s grandfather s day. It was Mexicans in hers. Now it was dead and rotted like everything the farm had to offer. Dead like them. Gerald closed the barn door, picked at his head again, and put his arm around Eliza s waist. You should stop doing that, she said. You won t have a head to pick if you keep it up. The sun started to peak above the fog burning away the curtains covering the leaning and graying farmhouse. A streak-stained window looked out at them from the porch like a cathartic eye. Gerald tightened his grip around Eliza s waist. Sometimes it gets me, he said. He pulled her close to him and smiled. But I try not to think about it too much. 48

It s gotta get done. That s what they pay us for. I get that. But it seems so cruel. Don t it ever bother you the way they stare up at you with those big old eyes? Bothers me more that there s still color in em. They re like shiny mirrors that you can see yourself in. Then why do we do it, Gerry? Why do it if it s so hard? They stopped walking. Gerald turned and looked at her. Because it has to be done, Lizzy. We ve been through this before. I know, but I don t like it. I... I she hesitated. I think I want out. Want out? Yeah. C mon, you don t mean that. Yes. I think I do, Eliza said. She crossed her arms and lifted up her chin. A crow cawed overhead. Gerald squinted against the ever-rising sun s rays. Slowly the fog was starting to burn off. He motioned for her to walk with him to the porch, but he did not put his arm around her waist. They climb the creaking steps. Eliza kissed her index and middle fingers and then placed the kiss on the gray, rotted post the one that hadn t broken off just before the top step. It was an old superstition. One she had carried over with her after her change. Some of the surviving experts had said that on rare occasions some of the Wave survivors could retain certain memories even mannerisms. This had been hers. They sat on two rocking chairs. These had been stained with a tan, almost pine-looking stain. On the termite infested porch they stood out like two white dots on a black piece of paper. Why would you want out? Gerald asked after they settled into the chairs. I told you, because it s getting too hard. So, you d rather be a Feral. No, I never said I didn t. Gerry, Eliza said. Gerald shrugged. That s what it sounds like to me. But you re takin a chance by becoming one. Shoot, Sandra Boehner on Channel Eleven News said that the state is adopting a new policy on rounding up Ferals. She did? Yep. Governor what s-his-name said that if Ferals are allowed to continue to run round, they ll eat up the entire food supply within two years. Maybe less. I didn t hear anything like that, Eliza said. She looked down at the rocking chair s legs. On the surface she caught glimpses of the porch. Some of the pegs in the banner running along it had stayed intact. The missing pieces had either been used to help barricade the windows and 49

doors or used as a weapon when the first few victims of the Wave had shown up in Rail County. What do they plan to do with them? Shoot em in the head, Gerald said bluntly. What else do you do with a Feral? Sounds like a better deal, Eliza said. Another crow cawed. It flew out above the remaining fog becoming a black dot against the increasingly hot glow of the sunlight. A warm breeze picked up and dried the slick, sweaty strands of hair on Eliza s head. Gerald reached out to her and took her bony hand in his. What d ya mean? he asked. Nothing, she said shaking her head. I just think it s a better deal than watching the warm ones scream and wiggle when we have at them. I know sometimes it s hard to do it when they re screaming Please don t! You don t have to do this! I m alive, I m alive! Eliza shuddered. And it s even harder when it s one of them we ve raised since birth, but it ain t no different than butchering a cow, Lizzy. You ve just got to think of it that way. Eliza moved to the edge of her seat. She started to fiddle with a loose string on her apron. Large streaks of blood had run down its front and dried there. A handprint, a small one, lay smack dap in the middle of her stomach. She touched it, placing her hand over it like a mother places her hand lovingly over her child s. She felt tears at the corner of her eyes but knew it was just her imagination because her tear ducts no longer functioned. Maybe I don t want to think of them of anything else other than fleshy, warm-blooded, living things. Maybe I just want to leave them alone. Lizzy. No, I mean it. I don t want to ever raise a knife to one again. Especially when they re screaming at me to spare them. Then what are you going to do? asked Gerald. If you go out there He pointed out past the farm, past the barn to the dirt road that ran just in front of their property. you re eventually going to give into the hunger, only this time you won t be able to control it. You ll be a Feral, and they kill Ferals, Lizzy. I know. I heard you the first time, she said. But it s better than doing what we re doing. I can t take it anymore. Gerald stood up. He stretched and then leaned over the porch railing, shaking his head. He looked around seeing the leaning barn, admiring the new steel barn they put up several years ago when their 50

bank representative came calling with their mortgage papers and said, Even though the world has flipped upside down and the dead have risen doesn t mean your mortgage bills can stop. Gerald closed his eyes and breathed in the warm spring air and imagined the cry of his old pet rooster, Foghorn Leghorn. My great-grandfather built this place in 1901, almost forty years after Reconstruction ended, he said. I know that, said Eliza. He hired farmhands, old carpet baggers, to come up and work the fields for a fair wage as fair as one as they were going to get then offered them housing. You remember the houses we tore down when my father was still runnin this place? Eliza nodded. He was a good man my great-grandfather. And he had chickens and cows, and pigs that were so fat you had to move the troughs to them just so they could eat. And you know what he did with those animals? Gerry. He slaughtered them when he had to. Not because he wanted to, but because his family depended on it. A chicken for a meal. A cow for the local grocery market that paid a nickel on the pound. A prized pig for a neighborhood pig roast. Sure he didn t like having to kill something living, but he understood that God had created these animals for man s benefit and he made sure to benefit himself, his family, and his friends on the carcasses of those animals. Gerald turned and faced Eliza. The fog was completely gone and the heat had swept up. Eliza continued to look at the rocking chairs polished legs. I don t know if it was God s plan to have us come back or be whatever it is we are. I don t know if it is the plan for us to have other people as a food source. But what I do know is that we ve worked too hard for this farm to go under. I do know that we have to eat those with a pulse to stay alive. Gerry, c mon. I know there will be a shortage if Ferals are left alone. Do you hear me, Eliza said. I know our profession is in demand. I mean it, stop it right now. And I know that by slaughtering the warm bloods and selling them in town brings in money to save our lands and it doesn t make me lose a wink of sleep over it. Enough, Gerald. Enough, Eliza said. She looked up. Her eyes 51

receded to tiny angry beads. Several strands of thinning hair fell down into her face. She didn t bother to move them. I got it, okay? I got it. She dropped her head into her hands covering her face. Gerald watched as her shoulders bobbed up and down. He listened as the strained breathing coming from under her hands leaked out. I m sorry, Gerald said. He moved to her and placed his arm around her shoulder. He kissed the side of her head and gave her another squeeze. It s okay, Eliza said. She raised her head. Gerald thought he saw the rims of her eyes turn red for a moment. I just don t want to be a monster. Not anymore. It isn t right. Lizzy, you re not a monster, okay? Neither of us are. The world s just different now, that s all. She shook her head. No it s not. We ve changed, Gerry. More than half of the world doesn t have a heartbeat. We require the life of another to stay alive, and that doesn t sit well with me. Then what do we do, huh? Tell me, what do we do? I don t know, she said. There was something in Eliza s voice that told Gerald she did in fact know. She had the idea since they d gotten up this morning, maybe even before then. Eliza put her head back in her lap and he thought it was best to just let the subject drop. She ll forget about it by tomorrow, he thought. The sun was almost to its highest point. The kid from Odis butchery would be coming by soon for the morning s pickings. Gerald rubbed his hands against his overalls and smiled. Guess I ll get the goods ready. Odis should be sending that boy out here any time now. Eliza nodded and told Gerald okay. She d be waiting for him on the porch. He stepped down the stairs slowly and shuffled to the dark gray barn. Odis delivery boy arrived five minutes later and helped Gerald load the 150 pounds of fresh cut meats into the back of the freezer truck. As he filled out a bill of sale and gave Gerald the payment he commented that this was the biggest haul he d had in the last couple of days, and that he hoped Gerald had help in butchering so much meat. Gerald thanked the boy and said that he still had help tomorrow, too. When the big, white freezer truck with a large, pink pig painted on the side and the words Odis Butchery painted in gold underneath it was long gone, Gerald started for the house. The porch was empty. The house was quiet. A strong breeze picked up, pinning his stringy hair to his head. The two rockers rocked back and forth quickly slapping into the side of the house. Eliza was nowhere. Gerald continued to walk making to 52

the stairs and he stopped. He looked at Eliza s chair and knew then that she d been gone a long time. Before that morning. Before last week. Before the first few years after the Wave. He looked out over the farm once more and then back to the rocking chairs. They looked like two white dots on a black piece of paper. Gerald kissed his index and middle fingers and touched them to the post, the one that hadn t rotted away, near the top step and went inside. There was still more work to do. 53