Crystal Eaters (22 page)

Read Crystal Eaters Online

Authors: Shane Jones

BOOK: Crystal Eaters
7.73Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

Jug knocks on a crystal to hear if it’s hollow, fake. He says this must be what remains and the ground trembles. He pats the largest piece and gives Z. a thumbs up.

The Brothers exit the prison shielding their eyes. Some limp and many have bruises ringing their necks. They straighten their curved backs and stand upright in the sunlight and then they do something Z. has never experienced before: applaud. The
guards, his Brothers, and the village inmates walking from the prison all clap, whistle, and shout, and Z. bows and puts a hand in the air like
Okay, thank you, thank you very much
,
you don’t have to do this you can stop now
, but he’s so overwhelmed with emotion, he’s been through so much, that his eyes fill with tears as he listens to the applause. He lets it wash over him. He notices how young the guards are. There’s admiration in their eyes, and they keep shouting his name, and one guy makes an odd hooting noise while jumping and pumping a fist, and some guards slap Z.’s back and two guards, one for each leg, try to lift him up but they’re too weak. Jug says he will be remembered forever now and the applause grows louder, seems to shake the ground. Jug will get his applause later. Z. takes another bow and smiles, this time blushing, not crying, this time thinking
I did it, yes
. He tries to guess the ages of the youngest guards.

Tall, scrawny, blond ponytail with top shaved head, Pants McDonovan exits the prison last. He claps and squints in the sun he hasn’t felt in years. He licks his lips and tastes dirt and to him it tastes good, real. His skin looks dented. Black pools under both eyes, no sleep. When he sees a piece of black crystal he thinks about chomping down on a big edge right there but his lungs burn as they adjust to the air and he stands with both hands on his chest.

The guards carry the crystals inside. They walk hunched over in wide stances slobbering and pushing their crotches against it. There’s enough for a lifetime and it’s what they’ll do, forever. They’ll add inmates to keep the game going. Jug thinks about the party they will throw for him with no limits on coffee or donuts.

“Saw your Dad,” says Z. “I was driving so fast and there was so much dirt and I’m so tired, but I think it was him walking into the hospital. We did it.”

“How is everything not on fire,” says Pants. “Are you sure?”

“He was standing outside the hospital next to a woman in a wheelchair.”

“My head hurts.”

“We’re going to be remembered.”

“But I don’t feel alive.”

“I never thought in a million years the black crystal existed. You should feel more than alive.”

“What’s a hospital? Was he okay?”

“It’s a place people go to get injected with crystals,” interrupts Bobby T., who stands but keeps losing his balance, his legs bruised from being hacked with batons, the ground again shaking. “I read that in Death Movement. He’s in trouble.”

“Listen,” says Arnold, interrupting. “A hospital is suppose to help people. And Bobby T. is right, you should hurry.”

“Where is it?”

0

 

R
emy kicks a doctor in the throat. She’s
been
kicking doctors in the throat. The doctor falls backward and slips in her blood. She spins and ducks from the grip of the others. She reaches for the door again.

Here he comes, dazed, light-headed, worried-eyebrows, never seen a place like this before, Brother.

“Who is this?” says one of the doctors. “Is he friend or family? SECURITY!”

“Adam,” says Remy.

His orange jumpsuit is covered in black holes of sweat. He walks with a limp. His hair is matted with crusted blood from landing on a concrete floor. Transparent skin. His overall look is what you’d imagine someone to look like who spent days in solitary confinement, little light. Remy wraps her arms around his thighs and they both want to believe that their counts rise. They both want to slip backward in time, and together, here holding each other in the hospital with everything around them fogging away in green dream, they feel like children again. Adam pats Remy’s head and kisses her. She imagines each pat adding one inside her. She feels so good in the swirling moment that the outside world is obliterated, it’s just them now, they are together and bright now.

Adam looks at Dad and smiles, then sees Mom on the table
and realizes nothing is wrong with Dad at all, it’s Mom, that’s why they are here. It’s been Mom this entire time. He’s known this. He walks to the side of the table where she is, where a few doctors continue to work. One doctor stands against the wall. He’s on the phone with the police. Each step is floating, as if walking through connected tunnels of dream. Adam touches her face with the backside of his hand and combs her hair to the one side it wants to go. He leans over, almost falls onto the table, and the doctors give space.

He slides his arms under and around her body, the hospital sheets cool against his skin, dirt cracking off his forearms. He lifts her from the table until his body and her body touch with her head resting on his shoulder. She weighs nothing. She is nothing. Against his ear her breathing sounds like mouth-blown mud. She smells sour with something inside burning and leaving. All her life, all her numbers, have led up to this point, this hospital reckoning. She’s trying to remember all the good moments. She’s trying to make sense of it all.

Remy walks over and supports Mom’s head with her hands.

“It’s okay,” Adam says to Mom.

Her breathing gets louder.

“I’m here,” he says.

He’s a good one. He’s a good one he’s a good one I knew he’d be a good one he’s a good one
.

Her body jolts forward.

“No,” says Adam. “I have you.”

There’s a Mom breath so deep that her chest expands into his chest. He feels the connection, the beating, the whatever it is inside them that makes them what they are. Two of the doctors nod and unhook wires.

“Call it,” says a doctor snapping off his gloves. “What’s everyone doing for lunch?”

“11:11 on her.”

“I could eat.”

Remy points to her feet.

Red slush. It flows from Mom’s back and oozes off the edges of the table and drips warm on Remy’s feet. She’s never seen a color so bright. The twin horses appear in the center of the room and tell her it’s time to go and she opens her eyes for the last time against Adam’s chest and her mouth falls open. Hundred the dog howls from the sidewalk surrounded by cops looking at the sky. Remy taps Adam on his shoulder, who is connected to Mom because he still holds her, he can’t let go, and they are connected to Dad who stands on the other side of the bed squeezing Mom’s hand and it’s true, the sun is here.

Two Dollar Radio
MOVING PICTURES

 

 

O
n an overcast Wednesday afternoon, Patrick N. Allen took his own life. He is survived by his father, Patrick, Sr.; his step-mother, Patricia; his step-sister, Patty; and his twin brother, Seth.

Coming 2015

Written & Directed by Eric Obenauf

P
art-thriller, part-nightmarish examination of the widening gap between originality and technology, told with remarkable precision. Haunting and engaging,
The Removals
imagines where we go from here.

Coming 2015

Written by Nicholas Rombes

Directed by Grace Krilanovich

Also published by
TWO DOLLAR RADIO

 

 

MIRA CORPORA

A NOVEL BY JEFF JACKSON

“This novel is like nothing I’ve ever read before and is, unquestionably, one of my favorite books published this year.”

—Laura van den Berg,
Salon

“A piercing howl of a book. This punk coming-of-age story smolders long after the book is through.” —
Slate

HOW TO GET INTO THE TWIN PALMS

A NOVEL BY KAROLINA WACLAWIAK

“One of my favorite books this year.” —
The Rumpus

“Waclawiak’s novel reinvents the immigration story.”


New York Times Book Review
, Editors’ Choice

THE ORANGE EATS CREEPS

A NOVEL BY GRACE KRILANOVICH

 

    
*
  
National Book Foundation 2010 ‘5 Under 35’ Selection.

    
*
  
NPR
Best Books of 2010.

    
*
  
The Believer
Book Award Finalist.

“Krilanovich’s work will make you believe that new ways of storytelling are still emerging from the margins.” —
NPR

A QUESTIONABLE SHAPE

A NOVEL BY BENNETT SIMS

“[
A Questionable Shape
] is more than just a novel. It is literature. It is life.” —
The Millions

“Presents the yang to the yin of Whitehead’s
Zone One
, with chess games, a dinner invitation, and even a romantic excursion. Echoes of [Thomas] Bernhard’s hammering circularity and [David Foster] Wallace’s bright mind that can’t stop making connections are both present. The point is where the mind goes, and, in that respect, Sims has his thematic territory down cold.” —
The Daily Beast

NOTHING

A NOVEL BY ANNE MARIE WIRTH CAUCHON

“Apocalyptic and psychologically attentive. I was moved.”

—Tao Lin,
New York Times Book Review

“A riveting first piece of scripture from our newest prophet of misspent youth.” —
Paste

“The energy almost makes each page glow. Though this novel starts as Bret Easton Ellis, it ends as Nick Cave – thunderous, apocalyptic.” —
Electric Literature’s ‘The Outlet’

SEVEN DAYS IN RIO

A NOVEL BY FRANCIS LEVY

“The funniest American novel since Sam Lipsyte’s
The Ask
.”


Village Voice

“Like an erotic version of Luis Bunuel’s
The Discreet Charm of the Bourgeoisie
.” —
The Cult

Other books

Grass for His Pillow by Lian Hearn
Murder Is Academic by Christine Poulson
Drag Strip by Nancy Bartholomew
Nolan's Evolution by Sarah Brocious
Body Language by Suzanne Brockmann
The Voynich Cypher by Russell Blake
The Long-Shining Waters by Sosin, Danielle
Dirty Deeds by Sheri Lewis Wohl
Burning Bright by Melissa McShane
Devlin's Justice by Patricia Bray