teaching my newborn humility with WHAT ABOUT BOB? "This movie was here before you, and will be around long after you've gone."
Feeling adventurous and replacing Windows with Ubuntu on an old computer.
 
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26 years old, live in the rural northwest of Sullivan County, N.Y., though a native of the South. Obsessed with genealogy and (Not unrelated) Confederate Apologetics. Published in Ellery Queen, had a book out you never heard of, now earning a living playing with computers (Design, tech, etc…).

Oil! by Upton Sinclair
Nothing Sacred by James H. Street on Netflix on Wii
0

Kenneth Averill McCullough

On Monday, January 30th, 12 days after his due date, my wife and I welcomed our first child at Catskill Regional Medical Center in Harris, New York, naming him Kenneth Averill McCullough.

Kenneth was my father’s name. Averill is an old family name on my wife’s side. Despite it being his middle name, we’re calling him Averill. I’ve always liked first initials–F. Scott Fitzgerald, W. Somerset Maugham, J. Edgar Hoover, all the greats! Also, I’ve heard that originally, first (or “Christian”) names were bestowed on a newborn by the church. If parents didn’t care for the name, no big deal. Give him a middle name of your choosing and call them that. This was the case with my paternal line of McCulloughs until my dad. His father, who was called by his middle name, hated the confusion he claimed came from it. Finally, I think Kenneth Averill sounds better than Averill Kenneth.

He’s the first McCullough born north of the Mason-Dixon line since George McCullough left Ireland in 1769, but I don’t think that makes him a Yankee. As the saying goes, if a cat has her litter in an oven, it doesn’t make the kittens biscuits. Besides, I had a jar of Coweta County, Georgia soil under my wife’s bed when he was born.

With more work than I can handle and trying to fix up an old house, you may have noticed I haven’t posted to this site in months. Adding a newborn to the mix probably isn’t going to fix that… But who knows? Wish me luck! Oh, and buy my old book, SON OF THE RIPPER! for your Kindle here. Not only is it cheap and a fun read, the royalties would be incredibly helpful as I try to payback the hospital and doctors for the birth out of pocket…

2

The Bravest Kid in America

TYLER McKINLEY was the toughest kid in his fifth grade class, plain and simple.

He’d jumped off the high dive at the swimming center without hesitating, rung the doorbell of the house on Pine Drive everyone thought was haunted, and walked across the top of the jungle gym even though the teacher was watching and he knew he’d get in big trouble.

He hadn’t even cared.

Which wasn’t to say he was a bad kid. He was good-natured and inclined to share his pudding at lunchtime with the kids who didn’t have any desert. He also stood up for smaller kids against bullies. That was probably what he was known best for throughout Theodore Roosevelt Elementary.

So it wasn’t surprising that while out riding his mountain bike in Mitchell Woods behind the mall, he decided to investigate what sounded like a scream. He’d just ramped a huge rock that most kids his age wouldn’t have had the guts to so much as look at when he’d heard it. Bringing the bike to a stop by kicking the back tire out to the side, sweeping up a large cloud of red dirt, he looked in the direction that he’d thought the sound came from and stood silent, straddling the ten-speed.

Insect chirpings and birdcalls filled the afternoon silence as he held his breath. And then, the scream came again. Faint but undeniable.

“Woah,” he whispered. “Hope they’re okay!”

Realizing how far he’d gotten from the mall and that there might not be another person around for miles, he started peddling as hard as he could toward the sound’s

source. It got louder with every revolution he pounded into the peddles, confirming that he was headed in the right direction. Each scream also came with greater frequency and rang out longer than the one before it.

As his adrenaline faded and Tyler felt the sweat and exhaustion from going so fast, he thought:

“It better not just be some dumb girl screaming because she saw a frog or a bug or something!”

A memory flashed of summer camp when he’d snuck a frog into Becky Rundell’s sleeping bag and had heard her entire cabin burst into screams that seemed to last forever. He couldn’t help smiling at the recollection.

Finally, when the screams sounded so loud he wanted to cover his ears, he came on a tiny little shack no bigger than fifteen foot square made out of half-rotted pine boards.

Tyler had hopped off his bike and let it drop in a patch of tall grass. Just as he was about to call out for the girl to ask if she was alright, he was stopped by a man’s voice that sounded angry. Angrier even than his neighbor Mr. Dobson when he’d found Tyler spraypainting a model car on his carefully mowed lawn!

He heard the man’s voice shout:

“Where the fuck’s your husband?”

“You piece of shit…” came a woman’s voice in reply–hushed, weak, sloppy with crying.

Tyler’s eyes widened at the brutality of the language. Walking in slow nervous steps toward the house he saw a short window just inches above the ground, appearing to look down into a basement. There was movement there and he dropped to his hands and knees and crawled toward it to peek in.

There was a lady with all her clothes off tied to a table saw, the ends of her feet all red and her toes looking odd. Crooked somehow. The last two on the left foot unusually longer than the others.

“Bitch, you’ve only got two toes left. Two fucking toes! How the fuck many toes you think you got?”

“Oh geez!” gasped Tyler as he realized that the reason her toes look so funny was that all but two had been sliced off.

The screaming man grabbed the naked lady’s hair and yanked her head back and put a knife close to her face and said:

“Bitch, I’m going to be real fucking honest with you. Brutally fucking honest. If I take off those last two toes, and you still haven’t told me what I need to know about that lying sack of shit you call a husband, I’m going to be mad. And you know what’s going to happen if I get mad? I am going to fucking hurt you, bitch.”

The woman’s eyes cinched and her body started shuddering with sobs.

“Oh geez!” said Tyler again, shaking his head.

“That’s right, slut,” said the man. “That’s exactly right. Because if you think losing those toes hurt, you’re in for a hard fucking surprise. Open your eyes.” The lady, still crying real hard, just shook her head. “I said open your fucking eyes!” Finally she did, even though it was just a little. And she pulled her head back, like she was scared. “Now you look at this knife. You see this big-ass knife? Well this knife has a way of getting horny after it cuts off a bitch’s toes. That’s right, when it finishes cutting off those pretty little toes, it’s going to want to fuck. And if you haven’t answered my question, I’m not going to have any choice but to let it.”

As he said this, he lowered the blade down toward her crotch and Tyler sort of got what he was talking about.

“No way! Sick!” he said.

“Now, here’s what your second-to-last chance sounds like: Where the fuck is that thieving piece of shit husband of yours?”

The lady let out a shriek that put every one before it to shame. It seemed to Tyler to last for minutes on end. And as her breath seemed to run out she formed words from the scream.

“I’ll never tell! But you’ll find him. You’ll find him when he wants you to, and he sticks that knife up your ass, faggot!”

A look of rage illuminating his face, the man grabbed her toe and began sawing into it, threads of blood spurting outward.

“Oh geez!” said Tyler, finally jumping up and sprinting to his bike as fast as he could then peddling off toward Main Street with all the energy he could muster. “I’ve got to tell the police!”

Despite the steep hills the bike had to climb, the beds of rocky terrain, the nearly two miles between the shed and the police station, Tyler’s heart never stopped pounding. The fear never left him. His joints never unfroze from the horror of what he’d seen. And he didn’t even notice to what limits he pushed his body. And beyond!

When he jumped off his bike and burst through the doors, Captain Murray, a friend of his father’s, just happened to be walking through the main lobby with a file in his hand. He turned as Tyler came through (As everyone did, the doors slamming noisily), and a little light glinted in his eye and he put his hands on his hips and smiled.

“Well if it isn’t little Tyler McKinley.”

“Captain Murray!” he said breathlessly.

“What is it this time, young man? Are you going to report another burglary at a house that just happens to be hosting the girls from your class’ slumber party?”

Police officers from across the room, all very familiar with Tyler’s antics, laughed loudly. “Or maybe,” continued Captain Murray, “you’ve just come to ask for a police car to come to the home of a Mr. I.P. Freely?”

Again, laughter erupted, but Tyler didn’t think it was funny at all.

“No, Captain Murray! I’m not joking around this time! I was just out riding my bike in Mitchell Woods, and I heard screaming!”

“Oh yeah?”

“Yeah! And I biked out until I got to his tiny house, and I saw a lady with no clothes, and she was tied down to this table thing, and there was a guy, and they were talking and he was cutting off her toes, one at a time!”

“Woah, woah, woah,” said Captain Murray, the smile disappearing from his face. He approached Tyler and knelt down in front of him, placing a hand on his shoulder. “That’s not funny, buddy.”

“I know it’s not!”

“It’s actually pretty messed up. I know your dad doesn’t let you watch R-rated movies. Did you see this kind of garbage just on TV?”

“No! I saw it in Mitchell Woods, like I said. Just a few minutes ago! You got to go and help the lady!”

“Tyler, I think you’d better go home. I’m going to give your Dad a call and let him know what happened. Because it sounds to me like he’s going to have to give you another talk about making up stories to the Police.”

“But I’m not making up stories, Captain Murray! This is real, and that lady’s really hurting! And, and… the man said that if she didn’t tell him where her husband was, then he was going to… put the knife inside of her.”

Based on Captain Murray’s expression, Tyler’s pantomime of what the man intended to do with the knife must have been clear.

“Alright Tyler, you’re making me angry. That is not funny. Now if you don’t go home right this instant, I’m going to tell your father. And he’s going to be very unhappy.”

“But…”

“Tyler!”

“Alright,” he sulked, lowering his head and walking outside to his bike and sitting down on the concrete steps. He folded his arms over his knees and sank his head into the cool dark cavern his gathered arms and legs formed. Thinking of the poor lady getting her toes cut off and worse, and thinking of the police refusing to believe him, he could feel frustration well up until he thought he might cry. But a cool breeze rustled his hair and he raised his head. And in so doing, he happened to catch sight of the American Flag on the front lawn, riding the breeze high atop the flag pole, fluttering and flapping in regal grandeur. And he remembered the last Fourth of July, at the evening fireworks display at Founder’s Square.

He’d sat on a blanket beside his father, who would be deployed to Afghanistan the next morning. And he’d caught his father staring at the large American flag at the Square’s center. And he’d noticed his tears.

“Why are you crying Dad?” he’d asked uncertainly.

His father had looked down and smiled and wrapped an arm around his shoulder and squeezed Tyler tight.

“Do you know,” he asked the boy “what that flag up there means?”

“I… I guess so. It means we’re free.”

“That’s right!” laughed Tyler’s father, squeezing the boy even tighter and grinning like a man possessed as his eyes widened. “But that’s not all, son. Oh no!” He paused as a fit of giggling overtook him, and his teeth clenched and his eyes bulged from his skull. “It also means never giving up. Ever. No matter what. And looking after those people in the world who might not be as strong or as well-off as you. Always protecting the weak.”

Now, Tyler stood up from the police steps and said aloud:

“You’re right dad! Americans never quit and we always help people who need it!”

And with that, Tyler hopped on his bike and began peddling as hard as he could. And an idea began to take form in his mind.

In no time at all, he reached his best friend Joe’s house. He rode right up to the front door and rang the bell without bothering to dismount.

“Joe,” he panted when his friend opened the door, “you’ve got to let me borrow your walkie-talkies and your b.b. gun! The really powerful one that uses CO2 cartridges!”

“This sounds like a pretty serious prank, Ty. Even for you!”

“It’s not a prank, Joe, it’s serious! But I don’t have time to explain.”

“Let me guess… you’re going to put one of the walkie-talkies in the girl’s bathroom at school, and then–”

“I told you, I don’t have time to explain! But it’s serious! Please. We’re best friends. We’re blood brothers. Believe me, I’ve got to have the b.b. gun and the walkie-talkies NOW! I promise I’ll bring them back as soon as I’m done.”

Suspicion covered Joe’s face as he stood staring several seconds. But eventually he conceded, saying okay as he disappeared into the house. When he returned, he had only barely extended the requested items before Tyler snatched them and tore off down the drive.

As he felt himself getting weak during the final stretch of the ride, he tried to think of the naked lady tied to the table saw, her toes being sliced off, and what the man had threatened to do with his knife. Then Tyler felt very very uncomfotable and just started thinking about America instead. How its people were brave and compassionate, and how its flag was so beautiful, and George Washington and Abraham Lincoln and stuff. This gave him the final burst of energy he needed to reach the shed in the middle of Mitchell Woods.

He dropped his bike a fair distance from the house, in a patch of undergrowth so that it couldn’t be seen. As he crept as quietly as he could toward the door, the b.b. gun slung over his shoulder, the walkie-talkies in his hands, he noticed that there were no screams coming from the shed. He hoped this meant they had finally let the girl go. Fortunately he didn’t check to see, as the sight of the lady’s head split down the middle–the saw blade jammed on one of her upper vertebrae–would no doubt have hurt his resolve.

Reaching the door, he switched on one of the walkie-talkies and set it on the ground and covered it up with some leaves so that no one could see it. Then he ran for the cover of the woods, standing between a pair of tall pine trees as he unslung his b.b. gun, double-checked that it was loaded, and switched on his walkie-talkie and raised it to his lips.

After a deep breath, he pressed the button to send transmissions and said:

“Hey! Come out here you jerk! Get out here, loser! Or are you afraid to take on someone your own size?”

Thrilled and horrified all at once, Tyler stared at the door. He didn’t have to wait long.

The man who had been dismembering the girl stepped out, his head darting around for the source of the words. Tyler felt a powerful satisfaction to see his plan working so brilliantly as he lifted the b.b. gun, took aim squarely on the man’s temple and pulled the trigger. A ringing thwap sounded and a second later the man convulsed and put a reflexive hand to the side of his head.

He turned toward Tyler, his eyes red, his face shaking and taut with the exertion of every tendon in his neck flexing outward with more concentrated rage than Tyler had ever seen. Tyler felt his stomach drop at seeing that his plan had failed. The shot had not killed the man.

And seeing that the man had spotted him and started off in a run toward him, he had to think fast. He thought perhaps he could take another shot at closer range, but sudden doubts about the killing power of b.b.s plagued him. And as the man was gaining fast, running about as fast as any man he’d ever seen, instinct took over and Tyler dropped the b.b. gun and walkie-talkie and started running away.

“Ha ha!” he screamed back at his pursuer. “You’re chasing me right into a police ambush!”

But the man did not slow down even a little. He didn’t believe Tyler. “Well not really, but I’m going to call the cops! I saw what you did to that lady!” Still the man ran, covering with each step as much ground as Tyler covered in three. He didn’t have long.

Unfortunately, he was out of ideas and just screamed in a high-pitched voice as he ran another few steps before feeling the weight of the man tackle him to earth.

“Who the fuck are you?” demanded the man in a rasping yell that sounded like gravel under tires.

Lying there under his weight, Tyler shut his eyes and mustered the air to shout back:

“I’m an American! And I saw what you were doing to the lady in there and I came to teach you a lesson!”

“Oh yeah?” snarled the man as he stood and pulled Tyler up so effortlessly it was as though he weighed less than air.

But now that he looked into the man’s eyes–hollow and evil–Tyler lost the ability to say anything at all. He only screamed. The volume and unbelievably high pitch caused the man to wince and shake his head. And he dragged Tyler toward the shack and rubbed at the sore spot where the b.b. had hit. “What the fuck was that, kid? A fucking b.b.?” But the prolonged scream was his only reply.

Reaching the shed, the man flung Tyler in through the door, where he crashed hard into the floor.

“What the fuck’s this?” demanded a man sitting inside, eating from a box of Chinese takout.

“Some fucking kid. Said he saw us working over that slut. Little fucker shot me with a b.b.”

“Ha,” the man said without laughing through a mouthful of food.

“Ain’t fucking funny,” he said in reply over the wail of Tyler’s screams. And he grabbed a blood-caked knife from the table, saying: “better believe I’m going to fucking enjoy the shit out of this.”

“Just make it quick. I’ve had enough fucking screaming for one day.”

“Fuck that. I’m going to make this last.”

He waved the knife wide-eyed and maniacal and took slow, deliberate steps toward Tyler. Tyler shrieked and wept as the man crouched down and, grinning, pulled the filthy blade against his own tongue, drawing a line of blood.

“Freeze!” screamed Captain Murray as he burst into the shed, his gun drawn, Tyler’s father and best friend Joe behind him. But this was nearly an hour later and Tyler had long since been brutally murdered.

0

Last Party at the Pembertons’

A GUEST to one of Bill and Dora Pemberton’s weekend parties tended to look forward to the meals prepared by the Pembertons’ positively divine French chef, Remi, a beautifully landscaped estate in which you could get lost for hours in the most exquisite trails lined with Mrs. Pemberton’s prize-winning foxglove, and countless other displays of the couple’s total disregard for cost.

But above all else, a visitor looked forward to the endless verbal fencing between Bill and Dora themselves; the most sharp-tongued and extraordinary wits anyone had ever seen. Particularly once their butler’s martinis were rolled out.

The present weekend’s entire party, seated on the veranda, watched in rapt delight as Dora looked her husband in the eye and said:

“I ought to cut your fucking balls off, you worthless piece of shit.”

Bill was nearly passed out in his wicker armchair, clutching his fifth or sixth martini of the still-young afternoon. The party’s eyes moved to him for a response, like a group in the front row at Wimbledon.

“Wha…? Whaddya want me to… to say? Say… I’m sorry?”

“That might be a start,” she snarled, ashamed of his drunkenness and overflowing with hatred for him.

“Okay. I am sorry… so sorry… that you’re such a… frigid cunt.”

Dr. Ritley, visiting the Pemberton’s for the first time, couldn’t help guffawing at the comment. Turning to look at him, Dora felt her face burn with shame. She stood and walked to the house, pausing only to splash her martini in Bill’s face. Confused, his eyes having been closed, Bill choked on the spray of liquid, coughed, and then fell to the floor, where he vomited what seemed gallons until his body rocked with dry heaves.

Shaking their heads and smiling to one another, the guests stood and started off; some toward the badminton courts, others in pursuit of a fresh cocktail.

It was around six o’clock that evening, following an early and unnatural darkening of the sky caused by black storm clouds swooping in from the west, that rain tore down and forced most of the guests into the library, where the butler served tall glasses of brandy.

Mr. And Mrs. Pemberton were noticeably absent, Bill being passed out drunk in his bedroom and Dora being inconsolable, her sobs audible throughout the hallways. Mrs. O’Neill stood in the middle of regaling the group with stories from her most recent visit to Madrid when a distant howling silenced her. The group looked about the room, locking eyes as if to confirm that they had heard what they’d thought they heard. Confirmation was not long delayed when a maid burst in, crying:

“Dr. Ritley is dead! Dr. Ritley is dead! Someone do something!”

A pair of the men started off with a sense of duty, but the rest, seeing the futility of aiding a man already pronounced dead, stayed put.

About this very time, Bill, emerging from unconsciousness with a frightful hangover, rang the servants’ quarters. Very soon after, Hulda appeared, a Bloody Mary on a tray.

“Read my mind as always,” he whispered, wincing and taking the Bloody Mary and taking it in a go. He threw up very lightly, not having much in his stomach, and Hulda, a stout old German who had worked for the Pembertons for years and years, stepped forward with a hand towel on the ready, mopping up Bill’s mouth, then the floor. “Fill it up halfway with vodka, will you?” he said, handing Hulda the empty glass.

Hulda, dutiful as ever, crossed the room to the vodka bottle on the bureau and filled the glass halfway with it. When she’d brought it back, Bill took it in trembling hands and chugged, hot tears streaking his face. But once he’d finished and taken several deep breaths, he appeared much better. Hulda decided it was as good a time as any, and sprung the bad news on her employer.

“Dr. Ritley appears to have been killed, Mr. Pemberton.”

“What? You must be joking.”

“I assure you I’d never joke of such a thing.”

“No, I supposed you wouldn’t. Just the same, I can’t believe it! Who’s responsible? What happened?”

“I’m afraid we’re very short on answers as of now, Mr. Pemberton. But the police have been notified and are on their way. Though with this awful rain it sounds as though many of the roads have been closed. So there’s no knowing how long it might take for them to arrive.”

“So in the meantime, we’re all stuck in this house with a murderer.”

“It would seem so, Sir.”

“Well,” said Bill, venturing to stand and feeling a white hot pain in his temple like an ice pick. He nearly collapsed but managed to keep to his feet as he motioned for the vodka bottle. Hulda brought it quickly and unscrewed the cap herself. After a few hot swallows, Bill steadied his stance and said:

“I know it may sound insensitive to poor Dr. Ritley, but could you also recount for me the earlier events in the day?”

“What do you mean, sir?” she asked, blushing.

“Your blush confirms my fears,” sighed Bill. “But please, the details.”

“In short, Sir, Mrs. Pemberton happened to come upon you and Miss Vaughn in your bed.”

“Oh no,” he moaned. “Oh no! How could I?” It didn’t take long for him to burst into sobs.

“Mr. Pemberton,” said Hulda as Bill collapsed at last, curling up on the floor as his body rippled with weeping.

“Go away Hulda. Thank you for your help, but I need to be alone right now.”

“But Sir…”

“Go!” he shrieked at the top of his lungs. Once she’d reluctantly obeyed, closing the doors quietly behind her, he restrained his crying and whispered: “Go, so that I might withdraw as well. Forever…” and he looked to a photo of Dora framed on his writing desk and a razor blade on the counter of the nearby sink.

A few moments and several deep swigs of vodka later, he’d gathered the razor and set it beside the photograph, and stared at both as he wrote in rigid cursive on a sheet of paper:

“Beloved Dora. How I long to quote Wilde or Keats to you, or to make some mad plea for turning back time and recapturing the love that once bound us. But I cannot undo what has been done. And I can not ask for that which I do not deserve… your forgiveness. Know that you have always been the exclusive possessor of my heart. You are my everything. Your Adoring Husband, B.”

Bill then poured a glass full of vodka, took a slow, savoring swallow, and dragged the razor across his wrist. It did not manage to break the skin. Closing his eyes, he tried to make a fast hard swipe, but missed altogether. After several additional tries, he finally managed to break the skin and draw blood, but only a faint trickle. Nowhere near a vein.

Leaving Dr. Ritley’s room, finding that he was indeed dead and managing to think of nothing to do apart from spreading a sheet over him, Messrs. Robertson and Delvaney were stopped by Dora, whose breath reeked of vodka.

“You heard about my husband no doubt?” she asked. In spite of the fresh impression of the dead body of Dr. Ritley, the men smiled in anticipation of Mrs. Pemberton’s inevitable bon mot.

“What about him?” asked Roberston.

“That he cheated on me with that little slut Ms. Vaughn and I walked in on them in the act.”

“Oh I’m sure there’s some reasonable explanation, Mrs. Pemberton,” said Delvaney, the swelling grin on his face making clear that his only desire in defending the husband was to set up the best possible witticism from Dora.

“The only explanation is that he’s a piece of shit, but that doesn’t matter now. What matters is that my mother always said that pay back’s double. So why don’t you boys come with me and we’ll see about making a little double trouble?”

“Oh Mrs. Pemberton,” they chuckled, patting her shoulder fondly and continuing their walk back to the library.

When Roberston and Delvaney had returned to the library, they bowed their heads stoically to confirm to their fellow guests that Ritley was indeed dead.

“But how?” asked one of the ladies. “Dr. Ritley seemed in perfect health. It must have been foul play.”

“Perhaps,” said Delvaney, “but not apparently. No wounds of any sort. He did appear to have bled some from the mouth, but perhaps that’s indicative of something as natural as a heart attack. I’m no authority, and I fear that Dr. Ritley was the only one among us who could be counted as such.”

“But,” said another of the ladies, “if it were a murder, then it would have to have been commited by one of the individuals under this roof, no?”

Though the truth of this was undeniable, no one dared speak to acknowledge it. They only cast uncertain glances at the others that filled the room.

“Well now let’s not be morbid,” said Delvaney. “This damned weather I’m sure could put anyone in a black mood, but I’m sure that Ritley died naturally, and at any rate, the police are on their way.”

“But with the weather, it might take them who knows how long to arrive!” cried one of the ladies.

“You all seem to forget,” said Roberston, lighting a cigarette, “that under this roof already is one of the finest minds in the world of criminal justice. Yes, Bill Pemberton is the superior to any detective that’s ever lived!”

“But you know what though?” said Dora, appearing suddenly in the room’s doorway. With no exceptions, everyone in the room felt better for her presence. “Fuck him. Fuck him. And I don’t want anyone here pretending that something didn’t happen.” By now, Dora had locked eyes with Ms. Vaughn, and her face flushed with loathing. “You know what? I’m not even mad at you. You know what? I feel sorry for you, honestly, honey.” Dora stepped forward and grabbed one of the other ladies’ half-full martini from the coffee table, much to the lady’s delight. She drank half of it in a go before continuing, “Because you’re the kind of girl who isn’t really that bright or that good looking or whatever. You probably can’t even attract a man unless he’s married, because then, he’s just excited by the prospect of fucking someone other than his wife.” Dora drained the glass, stumbled to the side as if gravity had shifted, and concluded: “P.S. You’d better get yourself tested, if you know what I mean.”

Roberston, reflecting the feeling of every other person in the room, let loose a guffaw and said:

“Oh that’s too rich, Mrs. Pemberton, brava!”

The next sound to fill the room jolted the party. A horrific noise, like a shrieking baby, formed itself into Bill Pemberton, entering the room with a 7-11 Big Gulp cup full of vodka, sobbing:

“You have to forgive me!”

“Oh my God,” slurred Dora, spinning to face her husband. She nearly fell over, and her martini glass crashed to the ground. “I’ve never been so fucking humiliated in my life. Why do you have to cry like a baby in front of our friends?”

“You have to forgive me!” he shrieked even louder and at an even higher pitch. “You have to forgive me you vindictive bitch!”

“Please call me a bitch again, Bill, that’s a surefire way to get me to forgive you.”

“Aaahhhhhh!” he shrieked, hurling his cup at her and grabbing his hair out of frustration.

“Thank goodness you’re here, Mr. Pemberton,” cried Delvaney. “You have of course, heard by now that Dr. Ritley is… is no more?” Spotting the decanter of brandy that the butler had left in the room Bill dropped to the floor and crawled toward it. When he’d reached it he stood, yanked out the stopper, and drank straight from the decanter. “And,” continued Delvaney, as if Bill had actually acknowledged him, “have you had the opportunity to examine the… the deceased?”

“Wha?” coughed Bill, attempting with great difficulty to focus his eyes on Delvaney. “Oh, uh, the doct… doctor or… yeah, I can’t fuckin’ believe that… he died, you know, when he was all… all for good and helping people alive. But uh, did I… you know, check out the guy’s body? No. No I didn’t even know that I… you know, I just didn’t even do it yet.”

“Well perhaps I could take you to see it myself, Mr. Pemberton. And you could perhaps begin to shed a bit of light onto this mystery.”

“And perhaps,” said Dora, staring at Roberston, “Mr. Roberston could come with me to discuss a few matters regarding the death of Dr. Ritley.”

“Of course, Mrs. Pemberton,” said Roberston, following Dora out the door.

In turn, Bill allowed Delvaney to guide him from the library and down the long hall that echoed with claps of thunder, toward the room of the late Dr. Ritley.

Standing just outside the library, Dora watched Bill and Delvaney disappear, at which point she took Roberston by the arm and guided him to her bedroom.

“Do you have any idea?” she asked, her face really beginning to sink under the weight of her intoxication, “how bad I want you inside of me?”

“Mrs. Pemberton,” chuckled Roberston. He stifled the chuckle with a sigh, saying, “you delight me more than you can know, but I must admit it does feel a tad inappropriate joking around like this with Dr. Ritley freshly dead only a few feet away, and the murderer here among us!”

Dora swiped her hand softly against his neck and widened her eyes to look up at him, fully exposing the blue and gray-flecked pools of her irises.

“I will give you whatever you want, Mr. Roberston. The freakiest thing you’ve ever heard about and not dared admit to yourself you’d enjoy, I will do. I will ride you until your eyes roll up into your skull and you die and sit swapping tales with the Devil himself about the greatest lay you ever had in your whole life.”

“Mrs. Pemberton!” giggled Roberston, trying to restrain his mirth by clamping his hand to his mouth. “I really must insist you stop! I feel absolutely wretched laughing like this at such a time!”

“Ye Gods!” cried Dora, throwing her arms in the air and pacing to the window. “Is my husband the only man with a pair of balls in this entire house?”

Meanwhile, Bill and Delvaney entered Ritley’s room. Seeing the expired doctor laying on the floor–on the horizontal plane rather than the vertical, like most men–wrecked Bill’s sense of equilibrium and he pitched forward and toppled as if tripped. And landing squarely on Ritley’s corpse, he moaned quietly for an extended period of time.

“Well?” pressed Delvaney, hardly able to contain his excitement. “What can you tell, Mr. Pemberton?”

“Unh…” growled Bill, recovering from having passed out. He managed to roll off of Ritley and lie on his side, facing him. He sent out a trembling hand with difficulty, his depth perception lacking as a result of not being able to focus his eyes. But eventually he took hold of the sheet and pulled it down, revealing Ritley’s face. The eyes pointed forward in a loose-locked gaze and his mouth gaped, the source of a small patch of caked blood.

Bill coughed violently for several seconds, and then, recovering again from a brief unconsciousness, remembered where he was and wondered if there was anything in the room to drink. He resolved suddenly to conquer his alcoholism once and for all and from now on would only drink wine or beer. And then he remembered that Delvaney stood in wait for an answer.

“Unh… Oh… oh yeah. I think… oh yeah, I definitely get it now. You see… see the blood there? Just a little, on the mouth? Yeah, that’s… oh yeah, I understand it now.”

“Top notch, old boy! I knew you’d crack this in no time!”

“Yeah. Would you help me up, please? I think that I got a cold… and it’s… inner ear sort of messed–” Bill was interrupted by an abrupt but light fit of vomiting. “Oh,” he moaned once he’d finished, seeing the pool of vomit that splashed Ritley and mixed with the blood from his mouth. “That’s definitely going to confuse the police…”

Delvaney laughed as he took Bill by the arm and aided him to his feet.

“There we are!” said Delvaney.

“Thanks. Now, I’d like for… you… for… help me to… the roof. But first, we’ll pop by the drawing room to grab a bottle of merlot.”

“Roof, eh? Intriguing! You expect to see the last bit of the puzzle you’ll need from up there, eh?”

“Uh.. yeah… let’s just say I expect to conclude the case.”

Remi stood in the center of the vast kitchen situated at the rear of the house with easy access to the garden filled with carefully tended herbs and fresh vegetables. He clucked and fretted over the evening’s bouillabaisse, slicing bits of orange peel into a simmering tank. And as Dora spied on him through the doorway, she wondered if he had not yet heard of Dr. Ritley’s death, or whether his devotion to his work was such that he kept on despite it.

She situated her breasts appealingly in the nightie she’d slipped into upstairs, and loosely tied a short silk bathrobe over it.

“You’d better live up to your reputation, Frenchman,” she growled quietly to herself as she entered. Her head felt foggy and the room seemed to spin so terribly that she could barely walk a straight path toward the chef. Bumping accidentally into a cart covered with dirty plates, Dora caused a light racket and Remi looked up. Startled, he stood at attention and addressed her:

“Ah! Good evening to you, Madame.”

“Relax Remi, please go about your business.”

“Merci beaucoup, Madame Pemberton,” he said with a sharp dutiful nod, and instantly returned to peeling oranges. Dora leaned over the counter, looking down to make sure her breasts dangled as visibly as possible over her low necklines.

“Remi, is there anything to drink down here?”

“I am afraid, Madame, that there is not anything for the drink. Unless,” he said with a throaty French chuckle, nodding his head at a bottle beside her, “you are liking the cooking sherry!”

She looked at him as he turned his eyes back to the bouillabaisse and she coyly lifted the bottle and took a long drink from it. Souring her face and gasping at the taste, she forced a swallow. Her eyes watered, but her brain smoothed into relief from the influx of alcohol.

“Hmmm…” she moaned, leaning further over the counter, so that anyone who made half an effort would have been able to see through her cleavage and to her belly button, “it didn’t taste very good, Remi. It was salty and sour. But I swallowed it anyway. I just think that’s polite.”

“Very good, Madame,” he said, mustering a quick glance and a distracted smile.

“Remi,” she meowed, standing and walking even closer to him, keeping a hand on the counter at all times to steady herself.

“Yes, Madame?”

“I am very, very hungry.”

“Oh Madame!” he exclaimed, dropping his knife onto the cutting board. “Why did you not say this from the beginning?”

A relieved smile spread over her mouth and seemed to melt her entire body. “Allow me to be serving you, Madame. What would you like?”

“Maybe,” she said, casting a glance at Remi that was practically obscene, “something spicy.”

“Perhaps a spicy andouille posole? Just a small portion with the glass of chianti? C’est magnifique!”

“I was thinking… something even hotter.”

“Oh, I see, Madame. I could then make for you a simple Szechuan chicken with chili peppers?”

“No,” she said, beginning to feel sick with the frustration of having debated weepingly over the idea of whether or not to avenge Bill’s philandering once and for all and now being unable to realize the decision. “I think you’re not understanding me, Remy…” She untied her bathrobe and shrugged a shoulder, expertly sending a strap of her nightie over the edge, bringing down the top just enough to reveal the shade of a nipple. “What I want is something French in my mouth.”

“Ah, I have it then! Remi’s special Crepes Avec Andouille–”

“I want you to have sex with me.”

“Oh Madame Pemberton!” roared Remi, putting his fists on his hips and leaning his head back to let a fit of laughter flow from his throat. “You are an absolute delight!”

“Fuck you, Remi.”

Wind and rain whipped brutally across the sky as Delvaney fought to open the door to the roof and Bill followed, his mind clearing as he chugged half the second bottle of merlot he’d snatched from the parlor. Streaks of red wine ran down his chin.

“I say,” shouted Delvaney to be heard over the whistling howl of wind, “it’s Hell’s own bells out here!” Venturing to the edge of the widow’s walk, he peered down at the miles of hilly countryside obscured by mist and rain. Bill, meanwhile, lay down and curled his body around the wine bottle like a suckling babe. “Can’t see a damned thing though, Pemberton. What do you expect to find up here?”

“Release,” he answered, his voice fixed and solid and sober.

“What’s that you say, old man?”

“I say the end of a life so wretched and selfish that it has ruined a girl that was purer and more sublime than any of God’s own cherubim.”

“Do you mean to say that Dr. Ritley was caught up in some sort of sex scandal?” gasped Delvaney, shocked, scandalized, but thrilled.

Bill stood and shrieked and pitched the empty bottle into the wind. It tumbled, spinning, into obscurity beyond the edge of the roof.

“I curse the foul drink that has made me the broken wretch I am!” He shook his fist at the Heavens and whether tears or rain drops made his cheeks glow, only Bill and the Almighty knew, though the fact that he was screaming and crying and pretty much always having some manner of emotional breakdown definitely pointed toward tears. “And yet,” he sighed, letting the fist loosen and fall to his side. “It is truly the wretch who curses the weapon with which he has murdered. Look on these hands, Delvaney! Look!”

“I see them,” he replied, not understanding the relevance to Ritley’s death but trying very hard.

“These hands are bloody. Though they have never claimed a life they have come as close as is legally permissible. The question of morality, however, is of course entirely separate from the law. Oh that you might have seen Dora on one of those pink afternoons when her face was fair and we sipped Champagne on the bow of her father’s boat but were intoxicated only by the presence of one another. Oh my dear Delvaney…”

As he spoke in an increasingly hushed tone, overcome with nostalgia, Bill approached the edge of the roof, wrapped his hands on the wrought-iron of the railing and then climbed over, his body at last steady.

“Ah, yes, you may very well have a better chance of seeing if you get to the absolute edge,” said Delvaney. “Though I must admit I still can’t imagine what out there might solve the case.”

“Will you tell Dora something for me, Delvaney?” he asked, subduing his sobs.

“Yes, of course.”

“Tell her that the wind smells of her hair and reminds me of Barcelona. Tell her I go with joy in my heart to think of the Heaven that might reunite us, or the Hell that might finally purge the black guilt of how I defiled her, the most precious flower ever to spring from God’s Earth. Tell her that I must go because I did not know how to love her. And that the man who can be blessed with such as she and yet not love is the man who does not deserve breath.”

With that, Bill closed his eyes and let go of the railing. And he spread his arms out wide and leaned out to let gravity take hold and guide him down to the warm bosom of the earth.

And then Delvaney laughed and grabbed him by the arms and pulled him back onto the roof.

“Oh Mr. Pemberton, I must admit you had me there. You know, I was warned about these parties of yours and I thought I’d never fall for such a gag, but I have no shame in admitting that you got me. I believed every second of it! I daresay my heart stopped beating when I thought you were actually about to kill yourself!” By now, tears streaked Delvaney’s face, and he had to grab his stomach to allieve the pain of laughter he could not control. “Oh, Mr. Pemberton! Have mercy! Between you and Mrs. Pemberton, I can hardly–”

“Fuck you, Delvaney,” he growled before starting back down the steps for a tall glass of Scotch.

Halfway to his room, his mind set on a nap as he gulped his Scotch, Bill ran into Dora. They stood staring indignantly at one another for several seconds, both at a loss as to what to say, until Bill, looking Dora over in her irresistable nightgown, set his glass down firmly on a bookshelf and said:

“Dora. Beautiful Dora.” He took her hand and looked into her eyes. “I don’t deserve your forgiveness. I don’t deserve your love. Mostly I don’t deserve you. But the thing I realize is that despite all of that, I love you. And I always will. And if that means anything to you… if my love interests you or appeals to you somehow, I can’t promise you perfection or sinlessness, but I can promise you that every day I see you smile, I will know–”

“Eat a dick, Bill,” she said, snatching her hand away. “Now if you don’t mind, I need to go sit down because I’m sore from getting railed by literally every man under this roof. Except you of course.”

A faint twitch in Bill’s eye, and a tightness in the corner of his mouth were the only displays of emotion before his face and body went as blank as death. This delighted Dora enough to completely undo her miserable feelings of unattractiveness following her rejection by literally every man under their roof, except Bill, of course. And she turned and walked into the bedroom to change, slamming the door shut. And Bill nodded slowly and breathed.

“Thank you all for coming,” said Bill, his voice like ice as he stood leaning on the mantle.

He looked more crisp and groomed and sober than anyone could ever remember seeing him. He wore a pressed suit and had his hair neatly coiffed, and he looked terribly handsome as he swirled a small tumbler of bourbon, ice and glass clinking.

The party stared at him from their various seats throughout the library. Even Dora, situated proudly in the armchair, so comfortable and happy in her pure hatred of Bill, completely unsullied by any last lingering hint of affection that she rather enjoyed being in his presence, waiting eagerly for him to embarrass himself. So complete was her emotional break from the man, that after being assembled into the room, she’d taken a moment to let everyone know that while the legalities might take awhile to work out, the marriage was absolutely dissolved and that they should all call her Ms. Tipton, her maiden name. They’d all laughed delightedly, apart from Bill, who showed no displeasure but only swirled his Bourbon and stared with bulging eyes through the window at the weakening rain. “Soon,” Bill resumed, “the police will have finally overcome the dreadful roads and will arrive and find a rather gruesome scene. And they will quickly piece together the facts but I recognize that many of you here have come as you might come to the theater, with a desire to see a show. An amateur detective piecing together, impossibly, a thousand tiny clues into one undeniable case.”

“And not just any theater!” said Roberston, beaming. “The best damned theater in the world! And the best damned detective!” Standing, Roberston lifted his glass and cheered “Here’s to Mr. Pemberton!”

“Here here!” agreed the party, lifting their glasses. Bill did not acknowledge them but stared at Dora. And even though there was no ounce of emotion or feeling in his dead eyes, Dora felt unspeakably violated.

“And of course,” added Delvaney, “to his delightful wife, our hostess. To Mrs. Pemberton! Or rather,” he chuckled, “to Miss Tipton!”

The whole party really erupted at that line.

“Yes, quite,” continued Bill, his mouth slightly agape. “At any rate, you all wish to know about Dr. Ritley’s death. At a glance, it appears natural. There is no indication of a struggle or foul play of any means. There is no wound and no sign of any cause of death but something natural and completely internal. On the other hand, Dr. Ritley was in better health than any other man or woman in this house. I must admit that I was puzzled absolutely. I couldn’t see any trace of evidence or motive whatsoever. But then I remembered something simple, yet vital.” As he spoke, Bill began to walk the perimeter of the assembled guests. “You see, Dr. Ritley wasn’t the only death in this house. Oh no. A marriage died here as well, which I know you are all painfully aware of. And I, for one, apologize for any discomfort this may have caused.” Bill came to a stop behind Dora’s chair and rested his hand on it as he took a restrained and genteel taste of Bourbon. She grinned to hear him acknowledging his failure as a husband in front of God and everyone. “But while I went about blaming myself, I fell so deep into self-loathing that I failed to realize that a failed marriage can never be the fault of one person. And that every mortal that has ever tread this earth has made mistakes and that this is not what destroys us, but rather our capacity for cruelty, our inability to forgive. We do not have to be faultless. But we have to forgive. We have to forgive.”

With this, Bill swiftly summoned a pistol from his jacket pocket and stuck it downward against the top of Dora’s skull. Without a word or a pause, he pulled the trigger. And Dora, unable to register a reaction, spilled blood from her mouth and slunk in her chair, her eyes rolling up. “We shall be reunited in Hell,” he muttered as he carefully set the still-full glass of Bourbon on the coffee table, stuck the barrel calmly to his upper palate and pulled the trigger a second time.

As he dropped like a weighted sack to the floor, the party sat in stunned silence.

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First Letter First Letter

“Me, I let dogs yap, and when night is nearing, girls want…”

I never truly enjoyed radio shows in Nebraska.

“…someting positively inspiring!”

Remember, even Fridays really, I’d get indigestion? Despite every antacid. Rolaids, Tums… Hell,
I never tamed one supper. Perhaps radio is near gas. Perhaps a crappy infomercial forces your insides noxious (given radio’s always “inflammatory” nature).

“So Ellen–vain Ellen!–never got it–vain Ellen!–Never imagined he’d inspire lies! I saw the sights and not our underlying relationship. I saw hellish earthly deeds! Too hellish! And never knew forgiveness. Untruths, lies. Not even Satan suspected!”

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Where’s Norm?