Ok, I’m back from vacation. I have to be honest, I didn’t write a damn thing the whole time. I did however have time today to work on this scene. First, I have to ask that if you haven’t read The Back Door part 1, that you do so before reading this entry. This one is a little longer than most, but I guess that makes up for my going away.
Also, I should probably give a little back story here. I wrote a story a while back that I never quite finished. It was about a guy who wrecked his car and got pinned behind the wheel. The car was on its side and his passenger, a lady named Nancy, was killed but also was pinned. She was dangling above him. Of course she comes back to life as a zombie and there’s nothing he can do.
The point of this is, that in the world of this story, the Northeastern US is plagued with the Reanimation Virus, or RAV, with a mass innoculation in the works. As of yet, there are no flesh eating zombies as we are familiar with, just people either laying there moaning and twitching after death or even the more rare Walkers. Life is almost normal, in other words. These 2 posts take place in another town, but still in a place where the RAV is not eradicated, and normal people come face to face with yet another layer of awkwardness that death can put upon us.
* * * * *
When news reached Timmy that Bobby Kane was headed for Millie’s, he went back to her house in spite of his parents.
Timmy ran around to the back door. It was true: Kane and Brock were both there, ready to pound on the door. “Hey!” Timmy yelled, “What’re you doing? Stop it!”
Kane’s wise ass grin was broad beneath his narrow eyes and freckled cheeks. “Daniels! Is it true? Old Lady Bancroft’s a Walker?”
“Millie is dead. Why don’t you show a little respect?” Timmy put himself between them and the door.
Kane’s smile faded and his lips grew thin. His eyes narrowed even more. “Why don’t you step aside, little faggot.” At nearly a foot taller, Kane leaned down, inches from Timmy’s face. “I never seen a Walker, and I ain’t gonna ask twice.” Brock just stood there, blocking Timmy’s sun.
Timmy didn’t back down. “You’ve never came here before, you got no right to come here now.” With defiance that will certainly earn him a beating, Timmy stared right into one of Kane’s best squinty-toughguy faces. “Matter of fact, why don’t you and your lard-ass boyfriend here, step aside instead?”
Brock gulped loudly; buggy-eyed and nearly choked on his Milky Way, while Kane simply flicked out an open fist and thumped Timmy on the forehead. His neck snapped back and pounded on the door so hard it rattled on its hinges. Timmy’s world swam for a moment, darkness encroached on edges of his vision, but slowly faded with the ringing in his ears.
As he tuned back into Kane’s screaming voice, Timmy could feel hot breath and spit pummel his face. “–ass-munch, little faggot! Your mommy’s not here to save you. How ’bout me and Brock beat you to death and see what you do? Maybe you’ll be a Walker like your old dried-up girlfriend in there, or maybe you’ll just come back as a Mumbler or one of those Droolies?”
With his back still to the door, Timmy rubbed his head. “I just want you to–”
A pan dropped somewhere inside the house. All three boys stopped, their little drama put on hold, and cocked their heads, listening. Millie’s chattering started up again, louder than before; sounding frustrated.
Kane stood still, wearing an expression of fascination so severe, that he looked as if his ears were working for the very first time. “That is awesome!” He looked back at Brock, who stood with both his eyes and teeth clenched; either holding his legs back from running or something from running down them. “Brock, don’t be a noob. You don’t see stupid-ass little Daniels here crapping his pants.”
“I’m not crapping, I’m choking…my candy bar…it’s–”
“Whatever,” Kane grabbed Timmy’s shoulder and dug his fingers in as deep as he could. He smiled as Timmy winced. “I just got an idea. How ’bout I don’t break your face, and you just go on inside and pinch your girlfriend on the ass?”
“How ’bout no–”
Still gripping Timmy’s shoulder, Kane gave a shove as his other hand turned the knob and the door swung open. The inside doorknob bit into the plaster wall with a crack and Timmy tumbled in, rolling backward and banging his head on a coat-tree. He lay there in a tangle of raincoats, flannel shirts and shawls, looking up at Kane’s silhouette in the doorway. A rancid-sweet smell descended on Timmy like a thick fog. It became pasted onto his tongue and clogged his nostrils, gagging him.
“Go on, Daniels,” Kane told him.
Brock held out his hand, gesturing with his thumb and forefinger, “Yeah, pinchy pinchy.”
Kane slammed the door shut and shadows filled in the hallway. With no fresh air, the stench grew worse. Timmy’s stomach wretched and his eyes watered–from around the corner, Millie’s chattering resumed. From inside, there was a wetness to it that he hadn’t heard before. A single bare foot, caked with blood and cookie dough slapped onto the wood floor of the hallway, followed by the swishing of a slippered one. The chattering sounded very frustrated now.
∞
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