Saturday, February 22, 2020

Compulsion


An irresistible urge to behave in a certain way, especially against one's conscious wishes.
Stone Creek stared at the quaint cottage on Longview Lane. The name on the mailbox was Elm. He hesitated before pushing open the small gate in the white picket fence. A small dog rushed at him, yapping away and bouncing with excitement. Stone scowled at the annoyance and walked the short distance of the red brick walkway to the front porch. He raised his hand to knock, but the door opened before his knuckles made contact with the wood. A smiling woman stood before him. “Hello,” she said. “Who might you be?”

Serotina Elm wasn’t expecting company, least of all a gentleman caller. Her corgi was absolutely delighted to see him. The dog always was a good judge of character. Stone hesitated before replying, “my name is Stone Creek.” He wasn’t exactly sure why he was there and hoped that she wouldn’t ask.

“Well, come on in, Mr. Creek. I’ll put on some tea.” The corgi barked excitedly as Stone stepped across the threshold. “Lollypup, you hush now,” Serotina scolded. After turning a few circles on a nearby rug, Lollypup settled down. “Sit yourself down anywhere. One chair is as good as another.”

Stone examined the loveseat and chairs in the small sitting room. The brocade had faded and frayed. The small coffee table sported a few scratches and water rings. The curtains in the window had yellowed from age. The area rug beneath his feet was the one bright spot in the room. He sat in one of the chairs facing the front window, but spent his time examining the colorful rug. Perhaps it was nothing more than the effect of staring at it for too long, but he could swear that the creatures depicted in the weave were moving – that somehow the rug was alive beneath his feet.

“Here we are, Mr. Creek. Some freshly brewed Earl Grey and a nice plate of snickerdoodles. I hope I haven’t kept you waiting too long. It’s been a while since I last had company.” Serotina set down the tray and poured out a cup of tea into a faded china cup. She placed two snickerdoodles on the saucer and handed it to Stone.

Stone accepted the offering with a smile and absentmindedly bit into a snickerdoodle while Serotina prattled on about seldom receiving visitors “...this far out of town. Why, you’d think I lived on the moon!” He took a sip of the tea to wash down the crumbs stuck to the inside of his mouth then bit into the second snickerdoodle. “Once upon a time, this used to be the center of town, but then they put in the expressway and the town moved closer to the highway. Would you like another snickerdoodle? I could freshen your tea for you.” He held out his saucer and she placed two more snickerdoodles on the saucer before refilling his teacup.

Stone slid back in the chair and balanced the teacup and saucer on the arm. Serotina continued to talk about the history of the town of Shady Glen. Stone hung on every word while munching on cookies and drinking tea until both the plate and teapot were empty. Normally, Stone would be carousing at the local bar, then staggering back to his apartment drunk. But there was something about Serotina’s voice that captivated him.

Serotina still hadn’t asked Stone why he was there. It was a question that he had been asking of himself since he arrived outside her front gate. Why was he there? Why had he sat through her drivel about the town’s history? Why had he just devoured a plate of under-baked cookies and a pot of weak tea? Why was the rug suddenly urging him to run?

Stone awoke in a sweat from the fever dream. He stumbled to the bathroom for a drink of water. The face in the mirror was flush and bristly. According to the clock it was mid-day. He had overslept. He struggled to remember what day it was. He braced himself against the sink as a wave of nausea passed. Fortunately, the water stayed down. “Baby steps,” he told himself.
Stone wandered into the kitchen to brew a small pot of coffee and search for something bland to eat. He found a package of stale saltines to nibble on while the coffee brewed. The saltines were unsatisfying. He had a gnawing hunger inside him and dug out a package of raw liver and voraciously devoured it. His intake of raw protein broke the fever. Feeling better, he took a shower and dressed, then drank some coffee while perusing the local yellow pages.

Shady Glen was a small town with quite a few local bars. He wrote down the address of the oldest bar in town in his pocket notebook. His first stop outside the small apartment that he had rented would be the local library. Stone’s father, Jakob Creek, had died recently. His father had left Shady Glen after Stone’s mother had died. Stone hoped to find the cemetery where they buried his mother. He needed to search the old-fashioned way as the internet had not arrived yet in the middle of the state forest area.

The town library was small. It still used the card catalog system to locate the books that it housed. He approached the librarian at the desk to ask about old newspapers. She told him that he needed to go to the newspaper’s office if he wanted to see back issues. She gave him directions to the offices of the Daily Herald.

The editor of the Daily Herald had the same last name as the librarian that Stone had spoken to earlier. He listened carefully to Stone’s request and then led him to a back room. Despite the newspaper’s name, it had always been a weekly paper. Relieved by this odd fact, Stone pulled the first bound volume off the shelf. He started to leaf through the pages looking for the obituary notices. There were no notices for an “Ivy Creek” listed in the newspaper during the first ten years of his life. He went through the pages again, this time looking for a birth announcement. There were none for Jakob and Ivy Creek.

Frustrated by his lack of success at locating any information on his mother or himself, Stone decided that he could use a stiff drink. At the Long View Bar, Stone introduced himself to a few old-timers occupying a corner table. “I’m looking for information on Ivy Creek. Have any of you ever heard of her?”

“No, son. Can’t say that I have.”

“Perhaps you knew her husband. His name was Jakob Creek.”

“Nope, never heard of any Jakob Creek. Knew a Jakob Elm once. He disappeared twenty-some years ago along with his son. Drove Serotina mad with grief. She used to live in the last home in Long View, until it burned down with her in it.”

“That woman was a real nut. She had a taste for raw meat, especially human flesh. She’d lure them in with cookies and tea.”

“But she took a real liking to Jakob. Let him live long enough to father a child. Then one night her craving for human flesh returned. She took a bite out of Jakob. He grabbed the boy and the two of them just disappeared.”

Stone smiled. “Thank you for the information.” He dropped a twenty-dollar bill on the table. “Have a round on me.” He turned his back to the gentlemen and quickly left the bar. “Well,” he muttered to himself as he walked briskly back to his apartment, “that explains the body parts in my refrigerator.”

Saturday, February 15, 2020

Cash Flow


“Bloody vampires, that’s what they are. How’s a man supposed to live on what they pay?” The raggedy old man staggered off down the street. Lilith sighed after him, then turned back toward the entrance to the blood donation center. She had recently lost her job at a rural mall shop and needed to earn extra money to buy food. The government assistance programs had ceased decades ago. The poor usually ended up living on the street, although they had taken to sheltering in abandoned shopping malls in recent years. The blood donation center was within walking distance of the downtown mall that Lilith had ended up living in after losing her apartment. Ironically, she had taken up residence in a space once occupied by her former employer.
Lilith pulled open the door to the blood donation center and went to sign in at the Intake desk. Because it was her first time there, she had to fill out some forms. The intake forms were pretty basic – medical history, emergency contact list, and permission to draw blood. When she had finished filling out the forms, the Intake specialist collected a small blood sample from her fingertip. She shuddered when the lance bit and held her breath while the glass capillary filled with her blood. “Please have a seat while we type your blood and check for factors.”
Lilith went back to the waiting area and picked up a well-worn magazine. The shiny pages had somehow managed to survive the decade or so since its publication. There were ads in the magazine for products that no longer existed, ads for stores and restaurants that had long since gone out of business, and ads for products that most people simply couldn’t afford to buy. She came across an ad from her former employer and in a fit of pique, she tore out the page and shredded it. She shoved the bits of paper back into the magazine and shoved it to the bottom of the pile.
Lilith looked around the room. A few more people had come in and the line of donors ahead of her had shortened. She watched the phlebotomists as they came out with donors, escorting them to the Check-out to receive their payment. The phlebotomists were unusually pale and thin while their patients seemed rosy and robust by comparison. Lilith was not exactly the picture of health having spent more time inside working long hours trying to earn enough money to live on. She wondered how much training was involved to learn to draw blood.
“Miss Wild?” a young woman’s voice interrupted Lilith’s reverie. She looked up at the skinny blond phlebotomist and nodded. “The hematologist would like to speak with you. Could you follow me, please?” Lilith picked up her coat and handbag from the seat next to her and followed the young woman through a maze of hallways to a small conference room. “Please wait here for the hematologist.”
Lilith hated waiting. And her stomach was starting to growl. She wanted to donate, get paid, and eat something. Instead, she was sitting in a small room at a small table waiting for someone – the hematologist. Did they only have one? Did the hematologist have a name? She glanced around the room for some clues, but the room was relatively bare except for the table, four chairs and the overhead pendant light.
A rack of pamphlets touting the benefits of blood donation, discussing the various types of blood, and informing about several blood related diseases hung on the wall opposite the door. Lilith grabbed one on blood-borne pathogens and began reading about the means of transmission. A knock on the door interrupted her reading half way through the pamphlet. The door opened and a woman walked in, introducing herself as Doctor Mariruth Quinn, the hematologist.
Doctor Quinn sat across the table from Lilith and smiled. “I took the liberty of ordering lunch for the two of us. A nurse will be delivering it shortly. We have much to talk about. It seems that you have a very rare blood type – or rather, your blood has some very rare properties.
Lilith sat back in her chair. She had been expecting bad news. Before Doctor Quinn could discuss the matter further, a nurse arrived with a tray. Lilith watched as Mariruth poured out the contents of a large thermos into one of the two large stemware glasses before offering it to her. “Here, take it. It’s fresh and a rare type, guaranteed to be alcohol free.” Lilith smiled as she accepted the glass.