Author's note:
Thanks to techsan for his "as good as it gets" editing. As for DG Hear β¦ hey, thanks for making me feel like I'm a better writer than I am.
A reminder that the author previously known as Dynamite Jack is now Jake Rivers.
NIGHT OF THE LIVING DEAD
I sat on the floor staring at the dying embers. The coals from the large fire I'd built earlier were coated with a fine gray ash β¦ as the exquisite thirty-four-year-old single malt was tinged with the same, more than faint, taste of ashes. The fire - gloriously hot with the popping, almost explosive sound of the pockets of burning resin - had been laughing at me, providing a jeering counterpoint to my pain.
Now the logs were only embers, their very soul sacrificed to provide me with a meager comfort; that sacrifice mimicking the sudden death of what I had falsely, foolishly even, believed and accepted - without question - had been a love for the ages.
Wait β¦ a sudden flare up of hopeful flame, flashing even as the structure of the fire collapsed, glinted off the fool's gold of the ring properly located on my third finger, left hand. I held that ring up in front of my eyes β that ring that had never left my finger in those twenty-six years of marriage. Where was the happiness so joyfully promised β¦ lo those many years ago? Where was the love implicit with the sliding oh so carefully onto my hand in that blessed sacrament of marriage?
With an anger I would have not believed possible six months earlier I ripped, ripped with a savage force the ring of betrayal off my cursed finger and threw it in the remains of the fire β¦ only to see it bounce off some hidden hard spot of what I thought had only been ashes β and roll slowly away through the wood consumed by fire, away from the dying, almost dead embers.
This was unacceptable; this I could not contemplate. My effort, a gesture really, had been refused by the Gods. I nodded, carefully, at the half empty bottle and made a heroic attempt to lower the level of that amber fluid of life. I slowly, oh so slowly, stood up, staggered to the kitchen and carefully grasped the tongs. Easing my way back to the fireplace I grasped the ring with a gentle care and dropped it into the heart of the ashes.
Like an owl wisely turning my head, this way, that way, I spied the papers lying carelessly strewn on the strips of contrasting Brazilian hardwood flooring. Ah, the papers. The papers that spelled out so carefully like that great Tammy Wynette song: D-I-V-O-R-C-E. Would that light my fire? No, no alcoholic humor now. Yes, the divorce papers would wonderfully bring light to the ashes of my life so I carefully centered them over the slight crater caused by dropping the ring in the ashes.
Yes, this was high quality paper. The fire now brightly flared. I grabbed two, four β¦ oh, yeah, one more of the resin filled logs and built a pyre β this is a good image, I muse; does a dead love deserve a sad funereal pyre? I carefully stack them, center them over the ring now hidden β¦ but not forgotten.
The heat was high now. A rhythm. A pattern. One log. Swig some scotch (such a beautiful word that, swig β to heartily, greedily even, take a big drink). Yes, I like that. Log, swig, log, swig. A nice rhythm going now. The fire a crucible for the ring as those hated D-I-V-O-R-C-E papers had proved a crucible of my love.
The embers are alive! No ash covered logs now β¦ a roaring, powerful heat pushing me back. A swig. Now the embers are coming to me. One here, on the hearthstone. One there β yes, that's on the carpet. The carpet glows β marches towards me with an evil glee. Another swig? Yes the last. The bottle thrown at the burning carpet, one bounce, two β the count so carefully noted β the bottle crashes. The noise of the breaking glass lost in the loud roaring of the flames. It's warm. It's hot. An idle thought β is a heat flash the same as a flash of heat?
Hot, fire, hell. Is that my destiny? To burn in the fires of hell? I laugh at the fire. I laugh at the D-I-V-O-R-C-E papers, those ashes of my life. I laugh at Jean. I laugh at each of those twenty-six years of my happy marriage.
God, it's hot. I can't breathe. Some instinct, some primal call from an unknown ancient caveman leads me to the door β¦ out in that blessed coolness, out in to that icy cold snow. Loud noises β sirens blaring? A medic; am I okay? A uniform; a cop? Talking to β¦ me. Taking my arm. I'm in a car, smelly, dirty. The heavy aroma of vomitus permeating the air.
They take me away and now I'm here in this place of peace and they feed me, bathe me, talk to me β¦ I say nothing, never, not a word for months on end.
Two years later I was released. They told me I was "cured." What does that mean? Should I be happy? Should I be glad? No, cured or not I still felt nothing but sadness. I guess that's all there is to life.
TO LIVE AGAIN
It was another three years before I really knew who I was and what I was about. They told me my name was Sam Adams but it sounded rough on my tongue β like speaking a foreign language. I would sometimes stand in front of a mirror, saying the name over and over. My first trip to the store I brought some beer β I just grabbed some, didn't bother to look at the label. I laughed when I got home and put stuff away and saw the label. I was only a guy on a beer label.
I remembered all about Jean now. I had no idea
why
it happened but the
what
was forever burned into my memory from the many β too many β sessions with my psychiatrist.