Superman's Cape (8 page)

Read Superman's Cape Online

Authors: Brian Spangler

Tags: #Suspense & Thrillers

BOOK: Superman's Cape
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“Andy…,” Jacob began. When Andy turned towards them, Jacob circled around his mouth with his finger, “… you’ve got twins,” he said then tapped his fingers to his own lips.

“Huh?” he replied. Andy looked at Jacob’s hand and then looked down the narrow of his nose, crossing his eyes as he did. When he saw the twin cigarettes he burst out laughing. It was a hearty laugh. Jacob and Jill jumped a little to his boisterous response. But then they laughed along with him – it was contagious.

“Hahhh, Hahhh. I guess he was lonely!” Andy bellowed and then laughed even harder. Others at their table and the bar started laughing along with him. Like Jill and Jacob, it wasn’t so much about the twin cigarettes as it was about Andy and his contagious laugh. To Jacob’s disappointment, and maybe even Jill’s, the heat of their flirting calmed.
Another time
, he thought and enjoyed the moment laughing with everyone.

 

 

As the day moved later into the evening, more coworkers joined their end of the table. Many rounds of drinks and even some food made its way in front of the WJL-TV group. “You know it is starting to rain outside,” one of them said. “The sky went dark, the winds picked up, and well, there you go, rain. Is it the hurricane on its way?” he asked.

“Nope, just a good sized cold front coming in is all. The hurricane is still a few hundred miles from us. It
will
be one of our news stories going in to the next few days,” Jacob exclaimed, wiping the sweat on his beer as he picked it up to drink. The taste of beer curled around his tongue and washed against the back of his throat. He looked up to the Panasonic in the corner. The news crew that gathered earlier was now watching a new set of faces deliver the forecast. He watched the satellite images of the swirling storm in the Atlantic and the projected path it would take in its journey over the ocean as it headed to make land-fall.

Jacob paused as a sudden strangeness came and hung on to him like an illness. When he looked at the swirling clouds, there was a void. It was as if a mental blanket or shroud were cast over his eyes. To the credit of his gift, from hail to snow to sunshine to winds and even the falling leaves of autumn, Jacob always saw everything – as easily as the beer in his hand. But this time he was blind. He could not feel the circling winds of the hurricane. He turned his head and let out a reserved giggle as though someone were watching and playing a prank. He turned left and right and then back to the image on the screen. He couldn’t see or feel what he was watching.

“Hey, so how did you know it was going to rain today?” Jill asked after pinching her fingers against his chin to pull his attention from the Panasonic. Jill startled him. He didn’t know she was there. Embarrassment turned his face red as he tried to put on a smile.

“He always knows,” Andy blurted. “He is the man with the sixth sense … didn’t you know?” Andy finished. Jacob turned in the direction of Andy’s voice which was carrying at least seven beers now, and one or more shots of Canadian Club.

Jill frowned for a moment as though wondering what Andy meant. She turned back to Jacob and smiled, her eyes reflecting the light of the Panasonic. Without warning she leaned in and kissed his chin. She held her lips there then put her hand on the side of his cheek and moved her lips full-on to meet his. The kiss started small, almost innocent. But as the breathing deepened, their mouths opened and he felt her tongue as her body pressed firm against his. Jacob started to go hard as Jill put her other hand on his shoulder and pulled him in to her. He felt lost in the kiss. For a moment he didn’t care about the hurricane or what he could and could not see.

“Now that is what I’m talking about!” Andy yelled as he banged the table top. Jill and Jacob jumped, startled by the hammering of Andy’s hand. Andy banged some more, and the bottles and dinnerware danced in response.

“Told you I never kissed a man with a dimple in his chin,” Jill said with a seductive smile, her grip on his shoulder holding him.

“Yes you did – you certainly did,” Jacob replied with a wink. He felt the heat in his face and hoped the red was hidden in the dark of the bar. Still smiling and releasing a girlish giggle, Jill sat back in her seat, while Jacob felt an embarrassing stir continue beneath the table.

“Awwwww, what? It’s over?” Andy asked, laughing. “Well, anyway. Like I was saying, what we have is a genuine sixth sense in our friend Jake here.” Jacob looked at Andy with amusement. He maybe even felt a little concern over what, or how much, he thought Andy actually knew. He never told Andy or anyone about what he could and could not see.

Jill leaned forward with seriousness in her eyes, “I thought the sixth sense was seeing dead people?” she asked with a flat expression. Jacob tried to hold the laugh in. It was a quick reply. Dead on the money, no pun intended. And perfectly timed to dismiss any of what Andy might be thinking.

“Oh yeah … right. Oops, wrong one,” Andy agreed. After a second to ponder, Andy started to laugh for no reason other than the pure joy of the alcohol induced buzz in his head.

Jacob reached over to Jill, and moved away a lock of golden brown hair from her face. He watched her cheeks flush as his fingers and hand moved past her face to carry the hair back behind her ear. And of course, he was reading her. Whatever hiccup he felt earlier was gone. He was on. He could sense what she wanted him to do next. What she was hoping he would do next. This time it was Jacob who was going to surprise her as he leaned in and let his lips meet hers. He slowly moved his fingers below her ear. He touched her skin just enough to feel her pulse. His hand cradled the side of her neck – a spot he knew she liked. His reading was right, of course, and Jill turned to accommodate his touch. He pulled at her lips with his own then paused and let their breathing talk before he turned to whisper in her ear.

“Superman’s Cape,” he breathed. Jill pulled her head back and looked at him, puzzled. Jacob saw the questions and concern in her eyes and maybe a hint of confusion or embarrassment in trying to figure out what it was he just said.

“What?” she asked. And before he could answer, Jacob felt the room turn on its side. He dropped his hand from her neck to his chair. He watched the ceiling throw itself to the floor in exchange for all the tables and chairs. “Jacob! You all right? What’s wrong?” he heard Jill say. The room was juggling the walls and the bar. Glasses and plates and liqueur bottles shattered in their exchanges of place. First from the floor and then to the ceiling and then back. Jacob turned his head to see Jill’s face a few feet above his. Her long golden brown hair dangled just inches from his own. He couldn’t read her anymore. He couldn’t read anything. He was a passenger on a ride and had no say in when it was going to stop. Jill spoke to him. He could see her lips moving but only heard the words of little bugs.

Troll mites started to laugh and chatter amongst themselves. They were talking of some grand plan to attack and defeat. Jacob was only vaguely familiar with the idea. He was no longer sitting next to Jill. He was on his back. His body was sprawled across the floor beneath the tables and chairs. The troll mites laughed louder. He heard their voices ringing in his ears with a pressure and pain that induced a deafness to the world around him.

“Andy! – Andy, help! There’s something wrong. I think he is having a seizure!” Jill screamed, as Andy’s face entered Jacob’s view of the room above him. The troll mites began gnawing at his toes. Jacob’s screams could be heard through the ‘Rust Bucket’ as the troll mites pulled his toenails from his feet. They were chewing on his fingers and arms and every part of him that lay on the floor. Fear and chaos swept through his mind as the pain of pins and needles from the troll mite’s teeth bit into him. Jacob threw his screams left and then right to the troll mite’s churning of their massive jaws from side to side. They ripped away at the clothing that was his flesh.

“Hold on, Jake! We have help coming! Someone hold his head!” Andy yelled.

The little troll mites used their powerful arms and picked up Jacob’s body. He felt his limbs wave in the air. He felt his bladder explode and his dignity run out of him in a puddle that settled all around him. With the troll mites’ claws latched into his skin, they started to shake every part of him. His muscles jumped and bumped on the floor with an electricity that coursed hot current through him. The strain tore at him and the shaking rattled his bones, teasing a breaking point he was sure would be reached any second.

“Breathe Jake! We gotcha, bud! Should we put something in his mouth or not??” Andy shouted.

The smell of gunpowder and burn began to fill his nose. The smell stung and watered his eyes. The troll mites gripped his skin harder. They used their teeth and nails to firm up their hold on him. They began to throw themselves up and down. Jacob could feel the troll mites rattling him. He was convinced their only purpose in life was to fracture and break him. As the violence of it went uncontrollable, Jacob lay witness to it all. He was just a passenger with no ticket to the next stop.
It was just a kiss,
he thought,
I was just going after a kiss
. He watched anguished faces come in and out of his view. He heard voices yelling to clear the floor and to call 9-1-1. The little troll mites that riddled him with bites and claw marks burrowed their way under his skin. They raced up under his chest and past his neck. They raced to strip his face of any composure he so desperately tried to hold on to. Jacob’s mouth slammed shut. He clenched his teeth with a strength that he thought would break his jaw. His head slammed back, hitting the floor beneath him. His eyes rolled around to stare at his mind. The room fell dark while the troll mites chewed and scratched and clawed and stomped his body some more.

11
 

Sara opened her eyes to the sight of Jonnie sitting in front of the TV. He wasn’t watching SpongeBob. Instead it was a different show. She thought maybe it was iCarly or another one of those pre-teen television episodes the boys and girls liked. Her arm acted as a pillow, supporting her head the last hours. Now her hand and fingers paid the price in a numb deadness. Righting herself in the chair, Sara dragged her dead hand across the table. She grimaced at the touch of her skin. It was cold and alien.

“You OK over there Jonnie?” she asked amidst a grumble as a bee-sting tingle jumped in her sleeping hand.

“Mmmm-hmmmm,” he answered back with Sara already half expecting the answer.

On the table next to her dead hand lay the photo that Jonnie saved. Sara picked up the photo. She placed it perfectly square in front of her. She moved her fingers over the faces on it and smiled as memories woke in her mind. She could smell the air’s crispness from that cool morning. The smell held the faint scent of dew glazed grass as they walked across the lawn in front of the home’s For Sale sign. She could hear Chris’s voice talking to Kyle. She could feel a stir followed by a subtle butterfly kick from the life she carried inside her. Jonnie was over four months old and still very much a part of her. He was growing and waiting to join his family on the outside. Sara put her hand to her belly and looked over at Jonnie.
Like it was yesterday,
she thought,
like it was yesterday
.

“Did Kyle come back in?” Sara asked. Her dead hand was waking a little more and sparking a burn that worked deep inside. The burn spread like wind-swept embers and she flinched when she gripped her fingers. She picked up her hand and tried to shake the wake into it.

“Uh-uh,” Jonnie said looking over to her with his eyebrows raised. His head moved to the sight of her shaking her own hand.

“My hand’s asleep,” she offered, with an uncertain smile.

“Come on, Jonnie. How about you help me drag him back inside? Maybe we can take Beasty for a spin and pick up some KFC?”

Jonnie was up from the floor with the TV off and at the door by the time Sara’s hand and fingers began to feel more normal. She swept her back-from-the-dead hand through Jonnie’s hair and opened the door.

A sliver of daylight reached into the trailer. The late afternoon turned the day to a mix of red and gold. Sara’s heart sank like the sun falling in the horizon. The trailer sat on a North-South stretch of Rt. 17 outside of Maysville. The Sun warmed them through the back windows in the mornings. And in the later part of the day, the setting Sun said good-night from the front of the trailer.

Sara put her hand to her mouth as the Sun’s slow descent brought it ever closer to the horizon. The sunset breached twilight and teased the stars and the moon while stirring an anxiety that removed any hint of sleep from her eyes. She should never have sat back down to rest. She should never have put her head down and closed her eyes.
God, please let him be out back
, she pleaded in her mind, and grabbed Jonnie by the hand as the two left the landing of the front door.

“Jonnie, if I’m right, we have maybe ten minutes of light remaining. It is really late and I don’t think your brother knows how quickly the sun goes down.” As the two started around the trailer, Sara’s body was jerked rearward with a surprising pull. Jonnie stopped his feet and grabbed her arm with both of his hands. She winced when her shoulder strained against the pull. The discomfort fed the aggravation sweeping through her. Impatience boiled up before she could consider any reasons why Jonnie stopped.

Turning back to him red-faced and annoyed, “What are you doing? Now’s not the time for any bullshit, Jonnie!” she hissed.

Jonnie was standing and pointing to the last of the light in the sky. To the north, there were already a few of the brighter stars winking a morning wakeup to the setting Sun. Sara followed the fading daylight up and across the tree tops and stopped when she saw the cluster of clouds. They were a deep earthy gray that bruised the serenity of the sky’s sunset. In the failing light, Sara could just about see the rain falling from the darker half of the storm front. It was clearly only a matter of time before the rain’s advance would settle over them as well.
They’re deep,
she thought.

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