Uncle John’s Bathroom Reader Presents Flush Fiction (11 page)

BOOK: Uncle John’s Bathroom Reader Presents Flush Fiction
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A cold breeze wafted up from the manhole, chilling Boydman’s naked legs and carrying the echo of a distant shriek.

“I looove youuu!”

Irreversible Dad

Kenton K. Yee

I
noticed Dad shrinking when I was in third grade. He could no longer pull books from the top shelf, and his pants mopped the floor. I wanted to tell Dad to see a doctor, but Mom told me to let him be. “He is what he is,” she said.

By the time I reached high school, Dad was the size of a teddy bear. Fortunately, he had academic tenure, so his condition was not a problem at work. The morning after I got my driver’s license, I threw a blanket over him, locked him in a cat carrier, and drove him in for testing. “Collapsing wave function,” the man wearing the stethoscope said. “It’s irreversible.”

Dad continued teaching until a student nearly stepped on him. By the time I was packing for college, Dad was smaller than a mouse—a baby mouse. We kept him in a gallon mayonnaise jar with two cotton balls. He licked one for water; the other absorbed his waste.

I had to squint to resolve him during my first visit home. We sat in the kitchen. I munched a donut and flicked specks of powdered sugar into his jar. He chased after the falling flecks like a goldfish gobbling food flakes.

“Be nicer to Mom,” I said. “Changing your soggy cotton balls through the mouth of a mayo jar with tweezers is making her twitchy.”

He cupped both hands over his mouth and shouted, but all I could hear was the quiet of cotton.

A few days later, Mom phoned to say she could no longer find him.

I rushed home and took his jar to the research hospital, where
they stuck it into an electron microscope. The computer screen flickered a black-and-white image of Dad sitting on a molecule of atoms, his legs crossed, an elbow on a knee. Engrossed in the undulations of a proton wave, he was as I had always imagined: the tall physics professor who reached up to the top shelf and pulled down books for me; the skinny graduate student who worked up the courage to ask Mom out on the final day of class; the little boy who stayed alone during recess in his second-grade classroom to read about subatomic particles in the
Encyclopedia Britannica.

Death & Taxes

A.J. Sweeney

M
artin walked home from work in the rain. Bus fare was not an option; he didn’t get paid until the end of the week, and rent was due. In a perfect world there would be no work, or rent, and he could curl up in a ball under a big blanket and wait for it to all be over. But, the world not being perfect, he got up and went to work every single day.

In the dim light of his living room, his answering machine blinked red. He hit play and listened to the message: “Martin, it’s Bob Jenkins. Long time, no speak. I’ve got something to discuss with you. Be at Mary’s Bar tonight at seven-thirty. It’s important. Try to make it. It’s important. That’s all. It’s Bob Jenkins.”

A cold sweat broke loose and ran amok under his shirt. It couldn’t be. It was impossible. Literally, figuratively, physically—metaphysically—impossible! But a third replay confirmed it was indeed the voice of Bob Jenkins.

Martin knelt on the ground beside his bed and pulled out a box containing a newspaper clipping dated August 17, 2001. “Banker Burned in Biz Blaze,” it read. The story detailed how fire gutted Jimson and Sons Light Fixtures on Midwood Avenue and claimed the life of accountant Robert Jenkins, who’d been visiting the office on a routine audit.

Staring at the clipping as if looking for reassurance or proof that he was not insane, Martin tried to figure out what to do. Should he meet this guy, this disembodied voice from beyond the grave? If so, it might prove to be a more interesting than average Thursday night. Not only was it dark and stormy and filled with voices from the dead, but Mary’s was supposed to be
quite trendy, and Martin hadn’t been there before.

And so Martin went forth into the night. Very wisely, he remembered his umbrella.

Bob was the same as ever: slender and gangly with sloping shoulders and thin, light-brown hair.

“God, I’ve been busy,” Bob said. “Tons of work. Mountains.”

Martin frowned but said nothing. He wasn’t sure how to ask Bob why he wasn’t dead.

“So,” asked Bob. “How’s work?”

“Boring.” This was true. “And you?”

“Well, like I said, busy.”

“Oh. Right. Seen any good movies lately?”

“Nah. I feel like I haven’t been out of the office in about ten years.”

Martin nearly choked at that.

The rest of their conversation passed surprisingly smoothly, aided by the liberal imbibition of beer. At no point though could Martin broach the subject of the big, dead elephant in the room.

At the end of the evening, Bob said, “Walk me home, Martin. I don’t live far.” He led Martin past the park, down Fifth Street, and into Greenwood Cemetery. They stopped in front of a grey marble slab simply engraved with

BOB JENKINS 1969–2001

Bob grabbed Martin’s shoulders. “Listen to me. You and I have been friends for years, right?” Martin nodded. “So you won’t take this the wrong way, but…I have to tell you something that you probably don’t want to hear.”

Visions of death danced before Martin’s eyes. So this was it—this was the meaning of the visit from beyond the grave. The great big duvet in the sky was calling him home and he never would worry no more. Tears of joy and self-pity sprang simultaneously to his ducts.

Bob pressed an envelope into Martin’s hands. He opened it
slowly, cautiously. “We are writing to inform you that there are inconsistencies on your tax return for the year ending 2001—” Martin looked up in disbelief. The letter was signed Robert Jenkins, Claims Adjuster, Internal Revenue Service.

“You owe an additional $4,584.93.”

“I’m being audited?” Martin bellowed.

“We don’t get to choose our cases, if it makes you feel any better.”

“This is insane! I’m getting out of here!”

Martin attempted to run but tripped over a votive wreath. Bob was on him in a second, pinning him to the ground. Martin struggled, but the dead man was too strong for him.

“Either you bring me a check,” Bob grunted, “Or you’ll have to call our toll-free service number and set up a payment plan.”

Martin screamed—shrieked, really—in a manner most bloodcurdling.

“Oh, it’s not
that
bad,” said Bob.

But it wasn’t his heretofore unknown debt that was making Martin scream.

During the scuffle, he’d fallen on his umbrella and driven the pointy end of it right through his own heart, impaling himself atop Bob’s grave.

The last thing he heard before he died was Bob whispering, “I’m sorry but you can’t fight us, Martin.”

Martin opened his eyes. It was very dark at first, until—

scraaaaaaaaaaaaaaapppe

—the lid came off his casket.

Bob was smiling down at him. “I told you you couldn’t fight us.”

He dumped a sheaf of papers in Martin’s lap and threw him a ballpoint pen and a pocket calculator.

“If you start working it off now…” He consulted a small calendar and made a few notes. “Shouldn’t take more than a
couple of months. That’s our one advantage here—no expenses.”

“And when I’m done with these? Then I can finally…
rest
?”

“Well…” Bob looked around helplessly. “Dave, do you want to field this one? I don’t know how to tell him.”

“Hi Martin.” A friendly-looking face appeared beside Bob’s. “I’m Dave Glass. I represent the Great Lakes Savings Company?”

Great Lakes. The name alone made Martin freeze in fear.

“Ah, yes. I see you haven’t forgotten. Neither have we. Martin, today I’m here to talk to you about your student loans.”

Brains for Breakfast

Beth Cato

R
ussell Thompkins’s mind maneuvered as swiftly as a stump, but it worked out pretty well for him. His job as a night stocker at the Wal-Mart Supercenter followed a basic pattern he could have sleepwalked through: Put out the new freight, empty the bins, front the shelves, rinse, and repeat. He got the job done, and that’s what mattered.

But that night, Russ kept wandering over to the meat case to stare at the brains all pretty with their Styrofoam trays and cellophane wrap. And he was hungry.

He didn’t think to wonder why yet, and he certainly would have been stunned to realize he’d been a zombie for over two weeks. When weird Uncle Billy bit him on New Year’s Eve, well, he figured Billy was just being weird like always.

Russ picked up one of the packaged brains, testing the heft in his hand. Was $3.99 a pound a good price? The little twists and curves in the gray matter intrigued him. He could just imagine that texture against his tongue. Maybe it could even unravel like a long pasta noodle. Grated Parmesan was on a good sale on a front end cap, and he had some spaghetti sauce already stored away at home.

Or maybe brains could be a dessert, topped with confectioners’ sugar or rainbow sprinkles…

Footsteps approached from behind, and Russ set down the brain and focused on a pork-chop value pack instead.

“Man, what’s up with you? Get back to your aisle.” Duder tugged him by the sleeve. “If Mikey sees you at the meat counter so much, you’ll get yourself busted. He’s in a right mood since GM has three trucks tonight, so don’t even get his attention.”

“I don’t know, Duder,” Russ said, swallowing down his drool. “I’m hungry, and it’s not letting up.”

“You need a good girl to look out for you. Ever read the labels on those canned soups you buy? That sodium content could pickle a person.”

Russ sighed. A girl would be a fine thing, especially if she didn’t mind that he worked nights or that he smelled like something a dog rolled in. He’d tried all kinds of soaps in the past week, too, and none made a lick of difference.

“Hour till lunch, man. Hold on. Buy a sandwich then.”

A sandwich? Russell sidled back to his blue cart of cereal boxes. A sandwich didn’t sound right, not unless it was a fat, juicy brain sandwich with some au jus, maybe with a side of one of those fried onions from that Australian spot. Or a brain with a slice of American cheese melted on top—or maybe a couple of slices—still in those perfect, unnatural orange squares of goodness. He could picture how it would squirt and ooze when he dug his fork in and raised it to his lips—and darn it, there he was, standing at the meat case again. If he wasn’t careful, Mikey would notice, and the boss man could be a terror on those three-truck nights.

Russ gnashed his teeth so tight they squeaked, and forced his attention to his freight. Working always came easy to him, but tonight it was hard, and the craving only got worse.

Duder went to lunch first, followed by a few of the other guys from grocery side. Russ kept stocking. What was the point of a break when he couldn’t eat what he really wanted? He couldn’t slap a pack of brain down on the lounge table and dig in with a spork. He didn’t even know how to cook brain or, heck, why his store even stocked it. He just needed it.

His side of the store a bit emptier, Russ ambled to the meat case again to check on things. That’s when he saw the woman.

Her thick curves and sassy bobbed hair would have earned her a double take any night, but at that particular moment she held up
one of those packaged brains, studying it and licking her lips.

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