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thelumpy — Drive 9
Published: 2010-06-19 05:09:58 +0000 UTC; Views: 268; Favourites: 0; Downloads: 2
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Description    Gravel crunches as I rev the worn out truck up the narrow driveway. Leafy branches swing overhead and undergrowth moves in layers around the dirt path. I sigh as the front tires bounce over a pot hole. It's way too late...no, way too early to be getting home. When are these 4 o'clock in the morning arrivals going to stop? Never. I hear myself answer my own question. They will stop when you're dead. God, why do I become so negative when I'm tired? Why do I talk to myself?
   I finally see the last turn in the road before I reach the thin patch of grass the poor truck occupies in daylight. Home. No, not really. More like...bed. Just plain bed. Which is as much home as I can hope for. The creak of the truck's door, the jingle of keys, the slam.

   The ridge that the house looks out over is turning gray. I know I have an hour before the daylight starts leaking through my blinds and into my head, because the birds have started their morning insistence. The chirps get louder as the sun gets brighter. My footsteps crunch on the rocks, and then tap on the wooden steps; the lock turns with the key. Oh thank heavens, I can sleep soon. I blink hard and feel my eyes sting behind their lids. My phone buzzes in my back pocket and I groan as I reach for it.

did u get home ok?

What a text... I don't know why I come at his every beck and call. And then he makes me feel guilty for being tired after helping him all night. The poor man, I love him. My fingers move slower than usual as I tap out a reply.

im home ill call later love

   My feet drag to the kitchen counter and I toss the battered cell phone next to the pile of mail Elle stacked. All the envelopes addressed to her are open with jagged torn edges along the tops. I slid open the drawer and started hunting for the letter opener and gave up. I wouldn't be able to read any mail I opened any way. I slip off my shoes. And then I stop.

   There is a bird sitting in the middle of the kitchen table. A bright red bird in a puddle of bright red liquid. And I scream.

"Elle! Oh God, Elle!" Am I still breathing? Where am I?...someone get Jem.

   My cousin hurls herself down the old stairs, her bare feet can't move fast enough and she jumps the last three. I see her thin face, eyes wide from fright and puffy from sleep. She reaches for me but I slip from her long fingers. "There's a bird. We have to go." She looks at the dead cardinal I'm pointing at with my eyes, its feathers limp and its neck broken. "Elle! Let's go! Call Jem for me. I have to get our things." Her shoulders drop.
   "Why do I have to call Jem? You're the one that can actually get him to listen. Jesus! Why does your life suck so bad, Cassie?"
   "Don't give me the typical 18 year old complaints now, Elle. Just call him...I was with him all night anyways, he should be in a good mood."
   "You're the only one that sees him in a good mood. But whatever, I'm dialing. Just get the bags. And pillows for you. I'm driving because I know you didn't sleep." I shake off the fatigue as much as I can and consider taking the stairs two at a time, but my body votes no.
   The bags are stacked neatly in the corner of the closet, the place they always are. I reach behind the bathroom door and grab an empty laundry basket, throwing items in. I'm almost in a trance, my muscles taking over and doing things by memory. 12 times I've done this. And I'm only 23. "CassIE!" Elle's voice, as thin as the rest of her, comes up the stairs and gives me one last boost of energy to get the bags downstairs.
   "I'm here. Load these things into the truck. Did you talk to Jem?"
   "Yeah, your basket case of a best friend is on his way. We're meeting up at the Shell. And he wasn't in a good mood for your information."
I shoot her a pointed glance. "Don't sass me, girlfriend. I'm running on six hours of sleep this week. Grab the keys."

   And for the 13th time, my family and I are driving away. Away from nothing and away from everything. That is it.
When I meet someone new, they ask me, "So, what do you do?" And I usually I answer with something normal and unassuming.
   "I'm going to school for Elementary Education." or "I work as a receptionist at Chic Salon, you know the one in town?" But every time I feel like telling them the truth. My lips open to say "I leave. I'm a professional runner. Runner away, that is. I drive from place to place so that the rest of the people I love can stay with me and stay alive. So that I can have a family. How about you?"
   But to an average person, my life sounds like an average action movie, or an average best selling novel. They would take my sincerity as a funny sarcastic remark. They would see it as a social tactic I use to break the ice. But I really do run when I see dead birds. Because when I see a dead bird, soon after wards, I too often see a dead person.

   And the bloody body that I find is never mine. Which plagues me every waking and sleeping moment.
   And so I drive away.
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Comments: 4

Leonca [2010-07-05 01:37:12 +0000 UTC]

This would make a great opening to a creepy suspense novel.

👍: 0 ⏩: 0

random-kumquats [2010-06-24 17:53:30 +0000 UTC]

i really wish you would've answered more questions in this piece. like why a dead bird? who/what is killing those around her?

👍: 0 ⏩: 1

thelumpy In reply to random-kumquats [2010-06-24 20:57:06 +0000 UTC]

I wish I could have answered more questions too.
Trouble is, I was scrabbling my way out of the biggest writers block ever and just getting words down was triumph enough. That, and I have no answers whatsoever. I actually have no clue.
Glad the piece made you think though...means I did SOMEthing.

👍: 0 ⏩: 1

random-kumquats In reply to thelumpy [2010-06-24 21:09:06 +0000 UTC]

lol. wow you get props for putting this to pen having writers block. i would've never have guessed!

👍: 0 ⏩: 0