Monday, February 09, 2009

Flash Fiction #2

This is my 2nd try at flash fiction.  This time Patti Abbott asked anyone interested to send in three or four lines of a first paragraph.  Then she sent one of those to each of us and we had to do a 750 word story using whatever first paragraph she gave us.  The list of the other stories are here:    http://pattinase.blogspot.com/ Below is my story.  Remember the first paragraph isn’t mine and I don’t know who wrote it.  Yet.

 

MEATLOAF


 

          Davy Dunn was irritable. Stomping his black boots outside of Madison Garden, he bit his fifth cigarette out of a nine dollar deck of Marlborough Reds and smoked the hot marrow out like he wanted to taste the lips of hell.

 


          Ray was late and it was fucking cold. Colder than his old lady's heart. He blew out smoke that curled like a snake chasing a mongoose.  Shoving the stick in his mouth he clapped his leather-clad hands together.  They made a muffled sound as if they were underwater.  Dunn kept clapping but it didn't warm up his hands.

 


          Looking uptown he saw Ray limping his way toward him, the little prick.  He was wearing his grimy pea coat which was a size too big for him.  He'd told Ray to stop wearing the thing but Ray wouldn't listen.  He had on that brown cowboy hat that looked like a sewer rat had made it his last meal. Sometimes Dunn wondered why he kept the loser around.  But they'd known each other all their lives growing up in the Bronx, and the thing was Ray needed somebody to look after his sorry ass.

 


          "Hey, Davy."

 


          "You're late, asshole."

 


          "Sorry."  He looked down at the sidewalk.

 


          "Sorry ain't good enough, you moron."

 


          "I tole you not to call me that." 

  

          Dunn knew he shouldn't because Ray was something like a moron.  Retarded maybe.

 


          "You know how long I been standin out here waitin on you, Ray? Wanna know, huh?  My balls are like white hot ice."

 


          Ray looked up at him. "How can they be hot and ice at the same time?"

 

          "Shut the fuck up."

 


          "Sorry, Davy."

 


          "What're you doin wearin that asshole cowboy hat for? You know what it looks like?  Like somebody took a crap on it."

 


          "Nobody did."

 


          "Shut up I tole you.  I oughta leave you here.  You know how cold I am?"

 


          "Like hot ice balls."

 


          "Listen, Ray, you're gettin on my nerves."

 


          "Sorry, Davy."

 


          Dunn tore off a drag of his cigarette like a starving vampire, then blew the hot smoke into Ray's beat up face.  When they were kids Ray's old man used Ray like a football.  He kicked him anywhere he wanted.  If Ray was standing up he'd kick him in the nuts or ass.  Ray was sitting down he'd kick him in the face.  Broke his nose a dozen times until it looked like mashed potatoes.

 


          "So Davy, you got the tickets?"

 


          "No."


 


          "No?"

 


          "Something wrong with your ears?"

 


          "I thought we was goin to the game."

 


          "Sold out."

 


          "You tole me you'd get them.  No problem, you said."  Ray's eyes began to fill.

 


          "Oh, here it comes."  Dunn wanted to bash him into the Garden wall like a rotten tomato.

 


          "I can't help it.  I was countin on the game, Davy."

 


          "Too bad.  Stop cryin like some pussy."

 


          "I wanted to go to the game.  You promised."

 


          "What's that smell?" Dunn said.

 


          "Smell?"

 


          "Yeah.  Like dirty feet or something."

 


          "Too cold to smell anything."

 


          Dunn leaned closer to Ray and took big long sniffs like he couldn't get enough.  Ray stepped back.

 


          "What're you doin Davy?"

 


          "Smellin the stink."

 


          "What stink?"

 


          "You. That pea coat. I tole you not to wear it no more, Ray."

 


          "I gotta, Davy. I don't have nothin else."

 


          "Well, you stink like rotten feet."

 


          "I'm sorry Davy."

 


          "You fuckin should be.  I have to smell it all night.  You can't even smell it with that nose, can you?"

 


          "Can't even smell my mom's corn beef no more."

 


          "Good thing.  She cooks like shit.  Everything she makes tastes the same."

 


          Ray looked at him with his brown eyes like slits in a devil Halloween mask.  "Don't, Davy."

 


          "Don't?"

 


          "Yeah."

 


          "What kind a thing is don't?"

 


          "It's what it says."

 


          "You're a dick."

 


          "I don't want you to say nothin about my mom, Davy."

 


          "I'll say anything I fuckin feel like sayin, moron."

 


          "And don't say that no more neither."

 


          "Listen you retard, you're lucky I let you hang out with me."  Dunn snapped the end of his cigarette into the street and watched it roll around the gutter until it stopped. "And your mother's meatloaf tastes like puke."

 


          Ray took two steps toward Dunn and shoved his knife through the black jacket and into Dunn's belly.

 


          "Ray." Dunn fell on his knees. He groaned then went over like a side of beef onto the freezing slab of sidewalk.

          Ray said, "Mom's meatloaf's the best."  He leaned over, pulled the knife out of Dunn, swiped the blood off the knife on his pea coat and limped downtown.

10 comments:

Patrick Shawn Bagley said...

Flash fiction is hard as hell. You made it look easy.

sandra seamans said...

I agree with Patrick, you made it look easy with a helluva good story.

Ray said...

You did make it sound easy - and easy on the eye too.

pattinase (abbott) said...

Just great dialog. These guys exist. I know they do. Well, one of them anyway.

Cormac Brown said...

Jeez, I can remember when my friends complained about 7-11 charging $1.25 a pack. That was a nice and vivid tale.

Gerald So said...

Great job working off the rhythm of the voice in the first paragraph. The title resonates, too.

John McFetridge said...

Fantastic dialogue and characters.

"... something like a moron. Retarded maybe."

Great stuff.

r2 said...

Very good story. Wonderful dialogue. You let me see their whole world in 750 words.

Sandra Scoppettone said...

A thank you to everyone.

Jessica Ferguson said...

I'm late chiming in but I agree with everyone. You've got fantastic dialogue. Yep, these guys are very real.