“You some kind of boss man now?”
“You could say that.”
“Pretty proud of yourself, huh?”
The big smile faded a bit. “Pride’s got nothing to do with it.”
“With what, murder? Mayhem? That’s what your Hallmark Society is all about, isn’t it?”
Big Karl shook his head. “You don’t seem to understand much, do you? We at Hallmark celebrate living. Life comes and goes. But while you’re alive, every day should be a celebration.”
“How is stringing up a man and shooting him full of arrows a celebration of life?”
Big Karl’s smile turned into a crooked grin and his face went from friendly to devious with the slightest adjustment of his eyebrows. “The world was already going to hell in a hand basket before Hallmark. We just help people get through each day they have left. Some folks accept this gift. Others don’t. We have no time for those who don’t.”
“So people have one choice? Become the murderer or the victim.”
The smile returned but the eyebrows remained angered, sending a chill through Junior.
“I see you’ve made your decision on which to be,” Big Karl said. “Gotten pretty damn good at it, too, from what I hear.”
Junior imagined Marie somewhere nearby, suffering a similar fate, or worse. “Where’s Marie? What did you do to her?”
“Marie? I think she should be the last of your worries. Marie will get what’s coming to her.”
Junior roared at his father and pushed off the wall with his feet, flailing a kick at Big Karl that didn’t come within three feet. He slammed back against the hard wall and felt most of the fight leave him along with the air in his lungs. He hung there, the cuffs biting into his wrists, his chest heaving. Big Karl leaned in close, laughing.
“I never did get you, kid. You always defied me, no matter what it was. Take out the trash, help me chop your mother’s head off. Didn’t matter, you never would go along.”
Big Karl held out his left hand, shrouded in a black leather glove, and said, “How about now, son? I’ll give you one last chance. Join me and we’ll rule the galaxy together as father and son.”
Junior tried to spit on him, but struggled to pucker properly due to the pain in his face. Instead, the saliva just dribbled from his lips and down the front of his shirt. He turned his head away from Big Karl, who laughed again. “That was from an old movie. Before your time, though, I guess.”
“Tell me, you bastard. What have you done with her?”
Big Karl just stood there smiling, his hands in the pockets of his nice blue suit. He remained that way for a moment with a wistful look on his face before turning to his right and nodding his head.
Marie appeared from the darkness. She sauntered up to their father and placed a hand on his shoulder. She laid her head against his arm and they both smiled at Junior. “Happy Father’s Day, daddy,” she said.
Big Karl kissed her forehead and walked away. “Thank you, baby. I’m glad you’re back.”
“Me too.” He handed her the Polack and she watched him as he left the room. Then she turned back to Junior, who sputtered and choked on his confusion.
“Sorry, Junior,” she said. “It’s a brave new world. Gotta do what you gotta do.”
Marie spit into her hands and rubbed them together, then hefted the Polack over her head and reared back twice, measuring the feel of it. Once satisfied, she sucked in a deep breath and swung hard, gritting her teeth, sending the honed spike into Junior’s screaming mouth.
SEEING RED
by Chris Lewis Carter
Our company picnic is almost over when my boss climbs the makeshift stage built alongside a wall of cresting sand dunes. He wrenches the microphone free from its stand, causing a whine of feedback that jolts the crowd to attention.
“Good afternoon, ladies and gentlemen! How is everybody feeling today?”
I finish the last bite of my hot dog, then wipe my ketchup-stained hands down the front of my yellow SunVerge t-shirt. Standing next to me, the blonde HR rep with a huge rack wrinkles her nose in disgust, so I wink and use the leftover ketchup on my fingers to smear a heart across my chest. She rolls her eyes and marches off, as the enthusiastic voice of my boss once again sweeps the beach.
“On behalf of myself, Kenneth Morgan, and the entire SunVerge family, it’s great to—”
More feedback squeals from the mic, and our resident tech geek scrambles to a nearby amplifier and fiddles with the knobs.
“Testing, testing? Okay, I think that’s better,” Kenneth says, now at a more reasonable volume. “As I was saying, it’s great to see everyone here at our annual employee appreciation day. Before we go any further, I’d like to personally thank some people who have gone above and beyond to make this event run smoothly.”
Kenneth points at the tech geek, a scrawny kid with a wispy chin beard and horn-rimmed glasses. Office gossip is that he’s almost thirty, but he barely looks old enough to be out of high school. “First, to Philip Barnes, for helping out with our sound system. Don’t worry, he’ll mute me if I say anything too embarrassing.” He pauses for a laugh that never comes, then adds, “Come on, let’s hear it for Phil.”
A few people feign a polite clap, but most decide that it’s not worth the effort of putting down their drinks. Philip waves for a few awkward seconds, then becomes interested in checking the extension cord at his feet.
“Second, to the lovely Miss Christine Dawson for organizing our games and activities. Where are you hiding, Christine?”
Across the beach, the blonde climbs on top of a picnic table and performs a sort of wiggling curtsy that sends most of the guys into a round of hooting applause. With her SunVerge shirt knotted just below her chest to expose her tanned midriff, and hot-pink bikini bottoms riding high, it isn’t hard to imagine how “Christmas Party” Christine earned her nickname.
Someone wolf whistles as she bends over to pick up her drink, which draws a few laughs from the crowd.
“Hey now, I’d know that sound anywhere,” Kenneth says, motioning towards a row of barbeques. “Tommy Hayes, you old hound dog. Don’t think I’ve forgotten about those fantastic burgers of yours.”
“It’s all in the seasoning, boss,” he calls back, stepping out from behind the grill to show off his greasy apron, which drapes over his thick slab of a gut and stops just above the knees of his cargo shorts. He waves at Christine, then makes a big show of gesturing at the words, “Kiss The Cook,” embroidered on his apron’s front.
Kenneth scans the crowd until he notices me standing by the ice chests, then shoots me a quick thumbs up. I return the gesture, but it takes most of my self-restraint not to flip him off instead.
In his mind, we’re still every bit the colleagues we were before last month’s performance evaluation. He thinks I’m still clueless as to why I didn’t get that promotion.
What a jackass.
“On a more serious note, I’d just like to say how grateful I am to have spent another year with this organization. This job means the world to me, it really does.” He lowers the mic and teethes on his knuckle, then puffs out an exaggerated breath. “Anyway, I know there’s been a lot of tension around the office lately, and the economy has been slower to rebound than we’d all like, but I promise to keep fighting for each and every one of you. Whatever it takes, we’ll get through it together.”
He locks eyes with me again, so I smile and clap like he’s the Second Coming in flowered swim trunks.
Pulling this off was even easier than I’d thought.
“Which is why I’d like to extend an extra special thanks to our lead programmer, Simon Gaines, for approaching me with his idea for a team-building exercise that we’re all about to take part in.”
Honestly, the people of Venezuela deserve most of the credit. They’ve been doing it for over sixty years. I just introduced the concept to middle-management.
Kenneth pauses for what I can only assume is dramatic effect, then say
s, “Have any of you heard of La Tomatina?”
A dull murmur ripples throughout the crowd.
“It’s a holiday they have in Spain,” he says. “Every year, on the last Wednesday in August, thousands of people visit the town of Bunol to take part in an hour-long tomato fight. Well, guess what? We’re about to have one of our own.”
The murmur swells to a nervous chatter. If I wasn’t the guy who sold Kenneth a line about this being a great way for the staff to “vent their aggressions,” and “have a unique, cultural experience,” maybe I’d be confused too.
“It might sound strange at first but it’s going to be great, I promise.” Down the beach, a few of the workers pull back a large blue tarp, revealing hundreds of plastic bags leaking red pulp.
People crane their necks to get a good look, muttering things like, “ridiculous,” and, “waste of food,” which is fine by me. Making Kenneth look insane for green-lighting this idea is a nice bonus.
“Before anyone asks, these tomatoes were overripe to begin with,” he says. “And they’ve been crushed, so nobody can throw anything dangerous.”
Well, nobody is a strong word.
“Everyone will get their own bag of tomatoes and then we’re going to have a ten minute free-for-all. Come on, meet me by the pile. Let’s get this ball rolling!”
Kenneth leaves the stage to a half-hearted round of applause, then immediately becomes surrounded by a hoard of unsettled employees. For a moment, I almost feel bad for the guy. He doesn’t have a clue what he’s just endorsed.
Then I remind myself how he screwed me out of a ten percent pay increase and three more vacation days a year.
Which is why I came prepared.
NO ONE KNOWS WHAT inspired the first Tomatina back in the mid-1940’s, but the most popular theory involves a mob of disgruntled residents attacking an elected official with tomatoes. These days, tens of thousands flock to Bunol every year for the event, and they’ll pelt each other with over one hundred metric tons of overripe tomatoes in sixty minutes.
But over here, hundreds of SunVerge employees crowd around a mountain of sticky plastic bags, each person removing one from the pile with all the enthusiasm of handling roadkill.
While they distribute the ammo, I’m out of sight, crouched inside a sand dune crater, unearthing the bag I’d planted there earlier this morning. When it’s finally exhumed, I sneak a quick peek at its contents.
Three large beefsteak tomatoes.
Stuffed with rocks.
Am I being petty? Sure, but it’s the perfect crime. Kenneth Morgan is going to have one of these babies punch a hole in that cheesy grin of his. While the chaos is in full swing, nobody will be able to trace a loaded tomato back to me, and it’s not as if they’ll be able to dust the skin for prints. He gets a few cracked teeth or a bloody nose, and I get some anonymous revenge for screwing me out of a pay grade.
How’s that for thinking outside the box?
I drop the tomatoes in my pockets and head down to join the group. Someone who I vaguely recognize from accounting hands me a bag dripping with red juice, and I quickly add my secret payload. Their size and shape should make them easy to find when I need to use one.
When everyone has a supply of squashed fruit, Kenneth jogs back to the microphone with his own bag of tomatoes in hand. “All right, I think we’re good,” he says. “In a few hours, the tide will wipe this beach clean, but the memories will last us a lifetime. And remember, our Tomatina is going to last for ten minutes.”
He lifts the stopwatch dangling around his neck and taps a few buttons. “Ready? Set? Go!”
I lob a handful of mashed pulp into the crowd, setting off a chain reaction of fleshy tomatoes that sail through the air like a volley of arrows before splattering across the employees. The juice leaves its mark upon impact, dyeing scores of yellow SunVerge t-shirts with bright red wounds, trickling down shocked faces and staining patches of sand.
Within seconds, the entire group is caught up in the hysteria. They’re spreading out across the beach, screaming, tossing food like an out-of-control children’s party. Some of them are taking cover behind picnic tables and overturned beach chairs. Others are firing wildly at whoever happens to be close by.
But most of them are no different from me. They’re out to settle office grudges, one tomato at a time.
People are teaming up, signing unspoken contracts to single out mutually despised co-workers. That guy who always drinks the last cup of coffee but never puts on a fresh pot, he’s getting pummelled from at least four different angles. Little Miss Always Steals Your New Pen, she’s drenched in red slop.
Deep down, most of us would take retribution for the simplest things. All we need is the right opportunity.
I weave throughout the fray in search of Kenneth, flinging the occasional tomato to keep from standing out. It probably doesn’t matter at this point, though. Nobody is concerned about what I’m doing. They’re all too busy enjoying their little slice of warfare.
That’s when I notice Philip, the tech geek, standing by himself near the tide line, with one hand cupped above his brow to block out the glare. He’s looking at something, or someone, so intently that he doesn’t notice me duck behind a trash barrel to get a better view of the object in his other hand. It’s a fresh beefsteak tomato, like the three I have stashed in my bag, but it’s bulging with tiny pinpoints of silver that gleam against the sunlight.
A rush of panic tenses my muscles. Philip is carrying loaded tomatoes too. How did he find out about La Tomatina before today? Has he been spying on me, digging through my work computer’s internet history?
From behind me, a tomato flies overhead, severing me from my thoughts. It hits Philip directly in the face with an explosion of pulp, and he staggers back a few steps towards the water.
He scowls and removes his glasses, searching for a yellow patch of shirt to wipe them clean. As he holds them up to inspect his work, another tomato soars through the air and strikes him right between the eyes.
Philip screams and clutches his face as a deep red liquid trickles out from between his fingers. He lowers his trembling hands and screams again, only now I understand why. His face is a mixture of blood, tomato juice, and thin shards of metal that look like broken razor blades. Some of the larger pieces have punctured his eyelids, and now Philip’s every blink drives them deeper inside his eyes, slicing through layer after layer of sensitive tissue until his irises turn to gobs of blue jelly.
I whirl around and search for his attacker, but it could be anybody. Hundreds of people are running back and forth, firing chunks of red, drowning out his cries with their own excited cheers.
Philip staggers toward the crowd, waving his arms and shouting for help, but that just makes him an easier target, and I watch him get pelted mercilessly before he disappears. Inside our ten minutes of company-sanctioned pandemonium, his blood is no different than their tomato juice. No one is going to notice until this is over.
A tomato thumps against the trash barrel, and I dive towards the sand like a soldier in a foxhole. The person responsible fires another one that lands nearby, and I look up to see my boss, no more than twenty feet away, covered in pulp and laughing hysterically. He throws one more that pegs me in the shoulder, then vanishes back into the swarm.
“Son of a bitch,” I mutter, scrambling to my feet and across the beach in pursuit. I try to single him out of the crowd, but it’s impossible. We’re no more than three minutes into La Tomatina and already everyone looks the same. Red-drenched shirts and shorts. Faces caked with red gore.
Life, dyed red.
After taking a few more hits, I distance myself from the mob and make my way towards the stage, taking shelter beside a stack of ice chests. Kenneth will have to pass alongside me in order to call off the game, and that’s when I’ll strike.
Don’t get me wrong, I feel terrible for Philip, but I’m not stupid. Getting involved could mean shooting to the top of some lunatic’s hit-list, whi
ch is exactly what I don’t need. Whoever Philip managed to piss off that bad is his problem now, not mine.
Besides, I’ve got my own payback to focus on.
It isn’t long before someone else is headed this way, but even though he’s stained like the rest, I can tell it isn’t Kenneth. This person is at least twice his size, with a sagging gut that’s slapping rhythmically against his cargo shorts.
It’s Tommy Hayes, our chef extraordinaire, and he’s pawing at his throat, wheezing, struggling to breathe, as a deeper shade of red oozes down his SunVerge shirt. He staggers toward the row of barbeques no more than fifty feet away, pulling whole beefsteak tomatoes from his bag and scattering them on the sand like landmines.
He manages to drop over a dozen of them before he trips over a folding chair and stumbles headlong into a massive drum-grill. His hand hooks the lid and yanks it forward, sending an avalanche of glowing charcoal onto the ground. He claws at the air for a moment, then collapses on top of the pile, howling as the briquettes hiss against his exposed skin.
Tommy rolls onto his back and thrashes wildly, accidentally kicking the stand of the next grill in line. It lurches forward and the lid flies back, pouring another landslide of charcoal onto his massive gut. A cloud of smoke and white ash envelops his body, turning his cries for help into a breathless gasp. He’s being cooked alive on both sides, only this time he doesn’t have the energy to get away. When the ash finally settles, the air is sizzling with the sound of burning fat.
I leap out from behind the ice chests and race for Tommy, but he isn’t moving, and I can already smell the sickening tang of charred flesh. The heat has peeled away most of his clothes, exposing patches of swollen, purple-red skin, that glisten in the afternoon sun.
I take a moment to suppress my gag reflex, and that’s when I notice the huge gash across Tommy’s throat and the shards of glass that are still lodged inside. Blood bubbles down his neck and pools along his shoulder until it glides away in silent streams of red, occasionally fizzing against a stray briquette.
A Hacked-Up Holiday Massacre: Halloween Is Going to Be Jealous Page 13