Bloody Bloody Apple
Page 1
Praise for Howard Odentz’s
Dead (A Lot)“
A fun and witty zombie apocalypse narrative that will bring a smile to your face as you discover (or remember) how the teenage mind operates in times of difficulty. The dialog is clever and the characters are realistic.”
—ScaredStiffReviews.com
“Right out of the gate, the plot is fast-paced and action packed (like any good zombie book should be) and infused with some great humor. It’s a fun and entertaining ride and I was sad when it [came] to the end.”
—BookandCoffeeAddict.com
“Howard Odentz does an impeccable job writing about this world turned dead.”
—BeautysLibrary.com
Bloody Bloody Apple
by
Howard Odentz
Bell Bridge Books
Copyright
This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places and incidents are either the products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual persons (living or dead), events or locations is entirely coincidental.
Bell Bridge Books
PO BOX 300921
Memphis, TN 38130
Ebook ISBN: 978-1-61194-564-5
Print ISBN: 978-1-61194-557-7
Bell Bridge Books is an Imprint of BelleBooks, Inc.
Copyright © 2014 by Howard Odentz
Printed and bound in the United States of America.
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any electronic or mechanical means, including information storage and retrieval systems, without permission in writing from the publisher, except by a reviewer, who may quote brief passages in a review.
We at BelleBooks enjoy hearing from readers.
Visit our websites
BelleBooks.com
BellBridgeBooks.com
ImaJinnBooks.com
10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
Cover design: Debra Dixon
Interior design: Hank Smith
Photo/Art credits:
Apple (manipulated) © Shawn Hempel | Dreamstime.com
Skull (manipulated) © Rainbowchaser | Dreamstime.com
:Ebba:01:
Dedication
For David
1
EVERY FALL, WHEN the orchards ripen and the leaves begin to die, there are murders. We know it, and we accept it. It’s the price we pay for living in Apple, Massachusetts. Our town carves up and spits out a few seeds each year. We all approach autumn with dread because nobody wants to be a seed.
The murders started this season the second week in September, right before people began putting pumpkins out on their front stoops and tying green stalks of corn to their lamp posts. We were just getting back into a routine of classrooms and homework when the senior class president, Ruby Murphy, disappeared.
Everyone took notice of the cop cars at school the next morning. In the fall, cops at school aren’t there to bust someone for pot or pills.
In the fall, cops at school mean death.
Ruby’s story spread through the hallways until we were all fat and bloated with the news.
Her body was discovered near the railroad tracks behind the strip mall. A meth-head named Junior Ziff found her there. Of course, the cops knew he didn’t kill her. Christ, even a kid at the state school over in Bellingham could see that Junior Ziff didn’t have the brain wattage to use a butter knife, let alone something sharp enough for murder.
Ruby wasn’t raped or anything messed up like that. Someone had just plain stabbed her—over and over again, sixteen times in all—to make sure that every last breath had escaped her body. Nothing about her death could be chalked up to a morbid sexual lust that wrapped blood and sex and gore all together into some maniac’s perverse fantasy.
In the end, no one knew why Ruby was targeted—or why she was the first.
As for the second murder, I guess there were more than a few people in town who breathed a collective sigh of relief when a brutal waste of space like Ralphie Delessio finally got what was coming to him. He liked to hit girls. Everyone knew it.
He was hung by his feet in one of the tobacco barns out on Street Road. His jugular was slit, and his life spilled out of him so quickly that he was probably dead before much of it had a chance to seep into the ground.
In the deep recesses of my mind where no one can see, I hold a bitter thought that Ralphie Delessio deserved something more sinister than a humane slice of the throat.
Over the years, murders in Apple have been much worse. Ralphie didn’t live through the agony of having each finger cut off and arranged neatly in a halo around his head. Ralphie wasn’t violated with a miniature statue of The Virgin Mary. Ralphie didn’t have his skin flayed off while he was crucified with screwdrivers to a tree in the woods.
Ralphie was killed like a lamb or a cow would be, and in the most compassionate way possible.
Kosher-like.
Ruby and Ralphie—murders one and two.
Now there is a third body in the woods, propped up against a tree. It’s a girl, but I’m afraid to look. I’m afraid that I’ll know her.
The wind picks up, and leaves swirl around Newie, Annie, and me as we stand on the path that we cut through between the high school and the middle school every day after school. Off to our left, much of the greenery has turned color or fallen to the ground so we can easily see through the thicket of trees. I’m immediately afraid, and a familiar burning sensation spreads across my chest and up my neck. I feel hot and nervous and excited all at the same time.
“Jackson, what the hell is that?” Newie asks, but I can tell by the waver in his deep voice that he already knows what it is but doesn’t want to be the first to say it.
Annie grabs my hand and squeezes it tightly. I wrap my arms around her, and she buries her face in my shoulder.
“Shit,” I whisper.
“I can’t look,” she says.
I don’t want to look either, but my curiosity trumps my fear. I push Annie gently away and step off the path into the woods. The leaves crunch under my feet, and it occurs to me that I’m being loud. I don’t want to be loud. A fresh corpse is like a newborn monster. I don’t know why, but I feel as though it can be wakened from death with the slightest noise, only to come back as something putrid and evil.
Newie follows me, his big feet making even more noise than mine. Every step he takes makes me cringe. I have a sick feeling inside. What will it be this time—a maiming? Asphyxiation? Something worse?
It is something worse.
The dead girl has no eyes. They’re missing from her face as though someone has forgotten to draw them in. Black blood weeps from the dark, vacant holes. Her skirt is pushed up, but not too far, and her legs are twisted at odd angles. Her lap is filled with dead leaves, and her hair has a bright yellow one stuck in its dead tangles.
She is decorated by death.
My mouth goes dry. Even without eyes, I know her. She’s that girl who sits alone in the library and doesn’t talk to anyone. She’s not pretty. Her eyes are too far apart, and her hair is too straight. Her mouth is always curled into a frown. She’s one of the unnoticed—destined to live out high school without ever going to a party or eating an ice cream cone with friends—or hanging out at the strip mall.
Unnoticed—and now that she’s dead, she’ll only be remembered for one thing—the act of dying—the act of being murdered.
“Fuck,” Newie manages before he moans and barrels away from me and the dead girl. I don’t turn around, but I know he doesn’t m
ake it all the way back to the path before he vomits. It comes up out of him in a torrent that he can’t control. He coughs and moans and coughs again. “Shit.”
“Who is it?” Annie cries, but I’m not sure how to tell her that I don’t know the dead girl’s name. She’s always just been there, living at the edges of our lives but never touching them. We’ve seen her since kindergarten with her ugly, wide-spaced eyes and her straight hair. I feel sick and shallow and horrible, all at the same time—for never noticing her—for never knowing her name.
“It’s that ugly girl from history,” sputters Newie. “The one with the bug eyes.”
Annie stamps her foot on the carpeted path of dead leaves and starts to cry. I don’t look, but I know her tears are spilling out of her eyes, and her black eyeliner is dripping down her soft cheeks.
“How?” she sobs.
In Apple, we never ask why a murder has happened. We ask how.
“I can’t,” coughs Newie. “I can’t.”
Annie moans. I don’t turn around to look at her because I have to stare at the body with the missing eyes and the twisted legs. I owe her that much. It occurs to me that I wish I could somehow turn back time and be nice to her—even once. I wish I could go back and say hi to her in the hallways at passing time, or maybe ask if she wants to sit with us at lunch. I know, if given the chance, I won’t do any of those things. Still, I wish I could be offered the opportunity. It would help me make sense of everything—of her—of murder.
After a minute or two, I turn from the dead girl, help Newie to his feet, and go back to Annie on the pathway. Her arms are crossed. Her face is streaked with black as I imagined it to be.
“What do we do?” she asks.
“Tell someone,” I say.
Newie closes his eyes and shakes his head. “We have to tell the police.”
“No,” blurts out Annie. “What if the killer finds out that we’re the ones who found her? He’ll come after us.” She starts shaking, so I pull her to me and put my chin on her head.
“It doesn’t work that way,” I whisper, thinking of all the other people in all the other years who found bodies in September and October. “People who find the bodies don’t seem to get murdered here.”
“Why not?” she sobs.
I don’t have an answer for her, so I just shrug.
2
THE POLICE STATION is in the center of Apple, next to a doughnut place. The spectacular cliché isn’t lost on any of us. Doughnuts and cops seem to go together—doughnuts and cops and death.
When we walk in, we’re all pretty freaked out. Annie’s makeup has smeared into deep, dark bruises on her white cheeks.
“Newton,” Officer Randy nods from behind his desk. It’s common knowledge that next year Newie’s going to take the entrance exam to become a cop. Being a cop is genetic in Newie’s family. His father is a cop, and his grandfather was a cop, too. That’s why Officer Randy knows him.
Life’s going to be weird when Newie’s finally wearing a badge, but he’s still getting wasted with us out at Rattlesnake Ridge or down at Pulpit Rock Lake. It’s not going to be the same. I can already feel time stretching thin around us, getting ready to snap the umbilical cord between whatever kind of life we’re living now and adulthood.
I’m not sure any of us are ready, but I don’t think we have a choice.
“Are you okay, miss?” Officer Randy asks Annie. She only shakes her head. A few fresh, blackened droplets splash to the floor.
I turn to Newie, expecting him to say something—anything—to Officer Randy, but he just looks scared. Officer Randy is the cop who’s always at school assemblies, lecturing us about the dangers of drugs and alcohol. He’s the cop who goes to reading-time at the Apple Library and warns the kiddies not to accept candy from strangers. He’s short and fat, with a round, bald head. I try to picture him running down a shoplifter at the strip mall or a bunch of delinquents writing graffiti underneath the railroad bridge on Gully Street, but I can’t do it.
“Um, is my dad around?” Newie finally asks, but his words come out like he’s a little girl instead of the captain of the football team.
Officer Randy looks at the three of us for what seems like forever, but mostly he’s checking out Annie’s tear-soaked face. Finally, he puts down the newspaper he’s reading and says, “Okay—sure. Wait here a sec.”
He heaves his bulk out from behind his desk, rearranges himself in his baggy pants, and heads off down the hallway to Chief Anderson’s office. There’s a box of tissue paper sitting on Officer Randy’s desk. I take two of them and hand them to Annie.
“Here,” I tell her. “You look terrible.”
“Nice,” says Newie. “You’re a freaking saint.”
Annie doesn’t say anything. She takes the tissues from me and wipes her face without the benefit of a mirror. It doesn’t work too well. By the time Chief Anderson comes walking in, looking every bit like a Sasquatch—all six feet and ten inches of him, with a huge barrel chest and a great head of shaggy black hair—Annie probably looks worse than before.
“What’s this?” Chief Anderson barks, looking directly at Annie’s face. Something terrifying flashes in his eyes, and he curls his meaty fists into hammers. “I don’t need trouble from you in the fall, Newie,” he hisses at his son and takes a huge step forward. “What did the three of you do?”
Newie’s not often afraid to speak, but in the shadow of his father he’s ten years old all over again. The giant man, with his giant gun, hanging from his giant belt, is the stuff of nightmares.
Annie starts crying even more, so I put my arm around her. My throat is dry, and I can’t quite get the words out.
“Answer me, goddammit,” demands Chief Anderson. His very presence sucks the air out of the room.
“Um,” Newie starts, but can’t seem to let the words free from his mouth, either.
Finally it’s me who blurts out, “We found another body.”
Chief Anderson’s arms fall to his sides. They look like massive tree trunks. I can’t help but notice that his right hand grazes the butt of his gun, and I swallow something thick and goopy.
“Where?” he says.
Newie finds his voice, but it comes out with a crack. “Behind . . . behind the middle school.”
Chief Anderson runs a large hand through his hair. It’s exactly like Newie’s. It occurs to me that, twenty years from now, Newie Anderson is going to be standing in this very same room. There will be three new kids telling him that they’ve found a body. It will be September or October, and rows of colored in scarecrow drawings will be taped to the cinder block walls. They’ll be from one of the third grade classes, thanking Officer Randy for his discussion on Stranger Danger.
“Shit,” mutters Newie’s dad. Little veins pop out on his forehead, and the sour stench of sweaty-stress rolls off of him. “Show me,” he says, as his lip curls in disgust.
So that’s what we do.
3
WE RIDE IN THE back of the chief’s cruiser. Newie sits behind his dad, biting his nails. Annie’s leaning up against me, and I have my arm around her. We’ve been dating since the end of ninth grade, so now, at the start of our senior year, we’re pretty much a big blob called Jacksannie, instead of just Jackson or Annie.
We were friends before we got together, so hooking up was inevitable. If it hadn’t been me, it would have been Newie, but I don’t think I could have lived with that. He’s shoved his dick in so many holes by now that I’m surprised it hasn’t rotted off. Annie’s better than that. She’s a good girl.
Newie isn’t dating anybody, but that’s okay. There’s a line of Apple trash a mile long—and probably some closet cases, too—who are more than interested in boning him. Annie says it’s because he’s tall, good looking, and built.
He’s just Newie to me.
We’ve been friends forever.
Chief Anderson looks uncomfortable squished into the front seat of his cruiser. He’s so big it’s unnatural. Newie’s already 6’2”, but right now he’s small and quiet and chewing at his cuticles with a vengeance.
The chief pulls the cruiser down Main Street, past Dippity Doughnuts and Francine’s Fire House. It’s really not a fire house—it’s a burger place—but it has burned to the ground at least twice, so it’s been renamed Francine’s Fire House. My family doesn’t go in there. My mother and Francine didn’t get along in high school, and my father once called Francine the Whore of Babylon to her face at church. I don’t know why. I think it may have something to do with the fact that she’s always shacked up with a different dude. I don’t know how she gets them. Francine has a terminal case of leather face. She’s baked herself in the sun so much and smoked so many cigarettes that her skin is hard and brown, like a biker’s wallet.
We pass Zodiac Tattoo Parlor and a place called Three Penny’s. People bring their old clothes and stuff there for resale, especially when it’s almost the end of the month, and there’s nothing left from their unemployment checks but toilet paper and Bagel Bites.
The chief turns down Carver Street and drives slowly by Bliss Playground. That’s where nervous mothers stand in small, tight groups as their children play on the jungle gym or go down the slide. Any other time of year, kids can climb on the monkey bars by themselves, but not in September or October.
That’s when mothers don’t pull their eyes away from their kids.
Apple’s a quiet town. We’re in the part of Massachusetts that nobody ever visits. We’re not west enough to be in the Berkshires or east enough to be considered part of the Boston metropolitan area. We’re not north enough to be near New Hampshire, which doesn’t matter anyway because there’s nothing there. Way south of us is Connecticut—the desolate part—between Hartford and Providence.
Apple is just in the middle, and nobody ever visits the middle.