Tuesday, December 16, 2014

Falafel, by Dima



Where was the bus?  It was a cold and rainy November night.  I had stood in the rain for half an hour trying to hail a cab.  Each one that passed by was occupied and I finally gave up.  I took refuge in a bus shelter and resigned myself to public transport.  Twenty minutes went by and I was cold, wet and impatient.  There was very little traffic on this street and I hadn’t seen even a passer-by in a long time.  I was beginning to feel uneasy when I saw headlights approaching in the distance.  Finally, a bus.  I wasn’t quite sure how I’d ended up in this sleepy corner of town anyway.  But all roads lead to Rome, and all buses lead to the transit centre, so soon enough, I figured, I’d be back in familiar surroundings.

With excruciating slowness the bus – really hardly more than a van, but I guess they used theses smaller shuttles to service the less busy routes – trundled up the road to where I stood, now back in the rain again, waving my arm so that I wouldn’t be missed in the weak moonlight.  Where were the streetlights, anyway?

With what seemed to be extreme caution, the driver pulled the bus up alongside the curb, and after several seconds the doors hissed open.  I leaped up as soon as they’d folded in enough to give enough room for me to get through.  I removed my hat and it released the water that had pooled up on top onto my head and coat.  I glared at the driver as if to say, “This is your fault- where have you been?”  He returned my stare with a vacant expression.

“It’s been a while,” I said, not quite sure what I expected as a response.  The driver’s expression showed no change.  He was an Indian fellow, probably a little older than me, and he balanced a plate of falafel on his lap.  After a few seconds he picked up one of the morsels and popped it into his mouth, chewing thoughtfully.  Then he finally spoke.

“It’s miserable out there,” he said, and then nodded as if to convince himself that he was telling the truth.

“Yes,” I agreed, “very miserable.  And there’s been no one around for...”  It was at this point I finally cast my gaze into the rear of the vehicle.  He and I were the only ones on the bus.  Indeed not a very busy route, then.  He’d probably been surprised to someone hovering around the bus stop.

He nodded again and repeated, “Miserable,” and went for the next falafel.  I nodded, too – I guess it was contagious – and fished out the $3.10 for the fare.  Three dollars and ten cents.  Ridiculous.  Oh, well.  Cheaper than the cab.  And so it ought to be- I could smell a decade of college students’ energy drinks and bums’ dirty coats wafting up from the seats.  And the distinct odour of rotten eggs.  I trudged to the very back of the bus and took off my sopping wet coat to lay it on the adjacent seat.

“Very miserable!” the man called back again, and I nodded enthusiastically.  I hoped he’d see that I agreed and stop feeling the need to repeat himself.  I saw him put on his cap, and we pulled away.  I leaned back and closed my eyes, glad to finally be going somewhere.  I felt weariness descend upon me.  I didn’t worry about falling asleep- all roads lead to Rome.  If I fell asleep, the driver would wake me up at the transit centre before taking off on another round.

I didn’t sleep, however, though I sat there with my eyes closed for what must have been 15 or 20 minutes.  I felt terrible uneasiness and my mind simply could not rest.  It must have been the deeds of the day, deeds I was not proud of, now swooping in to haunt me.  No rest for the wicked, they say, but soon enough I’d be at home and have access to my sleep aids, should I need them.

At long last I stopped trying to rest and opened my eyes.  It seemed much darker outside now.  Still no street lights, no moon to be seen at all, only the two beams from the headlights groping their way forward like ethereal feelers.  I could only barely make out the outline of buildings at the side of the road.  I made my way to the front of the bus.

“Much longer before we arrive?” I asked, and the driver shook his head.  He was humming a tune and seemed not to want to stop to talk to me.

“How much longer?” I pressed, and he sighed and stopped humming.

“Just a few minutes.  You haven’t gone too far.”

I think I nodded again, but it seemed odd to me.  I sat back down.  Over the next several minutes I grew more and more anxious as the outside seemed to get darker and darker, impossibly so, and the anxiety hanging in the air seemed to grow so thick as to make breathing difficult.  What was going on?  I had never been given to panic attacks.  I tried to control my breathing, but it didn’t help.

I looked out the window.  It was hard to see anything.  What I could see was certainly not seeming any more familiar than where I’d come from.  I started gritting my teeth unconsciously.

Another 2 or 3 or maybe 5 minutes passed and I was about to pester the driver again when suddenly, to my relief, I saw a familiar building up ahead.  Somehow, it was the only building I could make out.  Not illuminated at all – was there any light? - , but I could see it.  It was... oh yes!  It was my office building!  Yes, now we’re getting somewhere!

I was surprised as the bus slowed down.

“Are we stopping here?” I called up to the driver.  He didn’t answer.  I hoped not.  I certainly spent enough time at the office and could barely stand to be there the 10 hours a day that I was.  I had no intention of returning for more.

The driver did indeed bring the bus to a halt, and I heard the doors hiss open.

“Everybody out!” he called, and I made my way, somewhat confused, to the front.

“Sorry,” I said, “is this the end of the line?  And is this ParkerLife Building?”  The driver smiled and shook his head.

“No, no,” his smile grew even wider, “This is... your Hell.”

I felt my eyes grow wider and I turned back to look at the building.  But it was not there anymore. In its place were all the deeds of the day.  Played out in lurid detail before my eyes.  The foolishness, the complete indifference to matters of real importance that I saw now characterized my entire existence, laid out for me to experience, as I now felt certain, over and over and over again.  I knew for the first time in many years true horror.  Tendrils of darkness poured in through the door and started to wrap around my arms and legs, straining against me, pulling me out.

I whipped my head around to yell back at the driver.

“You can’t make me go out there!  I will die!  I know it!  I will die!  I cannot do this again!  I will die!”  The driver laughed.

“You surely will not die,” he whispered, “You may never die.  This is yours forever.  This is what you’ve made.”

And at that point I couldn’t struggle against the wisps of nights anymore, and they dragged me out the door into the night, and into my eternity, and as I began to wail, the bus doors hissed shut, pushing out a final gust of falafel and rotten eggs.

From the Desk of the CCCC, by Dima

The task: to write something - anything - other than a short story.
The prompt: shown below.
The source: http://www.crimescene.com/suicide/evidence.autopsy.php


Office of the CCCC (Cafe Chi County Coroner)
DATE and HOUR AUTOPSY PERFORMED:
12/12/2013; 10:45 AM by
Dallin Mendenhall, BA
9018A 94 Street
Edmonton AB  T6C 3V4
780-216-1180
Injury DiagramAssistant:
 Elena Redd, BCmm
Full Autopsy Performed
SUMMARY REPORT OF AUTOPSY
Name:
 ELK, F.N.U.
Coroner's Case #:
 2013-008
Date of Birth:
 Unknown
Age:
 5
Race:
 Elky
Sex:
 Male
Date of Death:
 29/11/2014
Body Identified by:
 Ms. Innocent Bystanding Cougar
Case #
 001294-23E-2013
Investigative Agency:
 Fish and Wildlife Officery
EVIDENCE OF TREATMENT:
1)      Yellow Class 2 Environment Canada tag, right ear
2)      Frozen solid
EXTERNAL EXAMINATION:
Drew3The autopsy is begun at a quarter to eleven on the morning of December 12, 2013.  The decdent is presented in the back of a Fish and Wildlife pick-up truck, a lifted Dodge Ram 2500 with a Metal Mulisha sticker in the back window.  The body is in two pieces, a gnawed, separated hind leg, and the rest of the deceased.  The hair is whited by frost, and the flesh and carcass is solid due ostensibly to long exposure to sub-zero temperatures.  The girlfriend of the truck owner is an attractive brunette, approximately 5 feet and 9 inches tall, sporting long hair in loose curls and dressed in a yellow hoodie and lululemon yoga pants.  As noted before, the deceased’s right ear has been tagged with an Environment Canada marker.  Skin and bone both present gnaw marks, and flesh shows evidence of tearing by feline claws.  The truck owner, a Mr. Ewan Thropp of Bon Accord, Alberta, describes a cougar he saw prowling the territory near the victim, and quickly indicates that the cougar could be the reason for the demise of the animal.  I am a professional and do not rush to assumptions, so I will completely ignore his comments and refocus my attentions on the decedent and the attractive female specimen.
Ms. Redd performs a close-up inspection of the separated limb and declares it to to be “gross, bloody, and disgusting”.  We will send the limb to the laboratory for confirmation of these findings.
The rest of the body, so far as I can pry the frozen mass apart, shows no trauma, injury, or apparent sign of attack, aside from the front right kneecap being entirely and horrifically shattered by a hunter’s bullet.  As external examination reveals no reason the elk could not have made it safely home to the Mrs. for a hot cup of tea before bed on the 29th of November (which is the last date completed in the deceased’s day planner, thus conclusively establishing date of death), we rule out accidental death.
INTERNAL EXAMINATION:
HEAD--CENTRAL NERVOUS SYSTEM: The head appears elky in form and displays unexpected solid, pokey growths from the top of the skull.  The brain seems to still be inside the head as there are no signs of exit from the ears.
SKELETAL SYSTEM: Absence of casts or slings indicates no broken bones.  As we performed dissection, Ms. Redd called dibs on the wishbone.  I am unaware of whether elk have wishbones.  Bones appeared off-white, with some blood that made me queasy and caused me to have no desire to investigate further.
RESPIRATORY SYSTEM--THROAT STRUCTURES: The oral cavity shows no lesions. Petechial hemorrhaging is present in the mucosa of the lips and the interior of the mouth.  Snow and ice are to be found a significant way down the mouth and esophagus, showing the elk had a sweet tooth with a particular fondness for ice cream treats, but a bad habit of not properly swallowing before taking the next bite.
The lungs weigh: right, 4.2 kilograms; left 5.3 kilograms. Unable to identify red, muscley mass that clings to the left lung.  Appears to be a very bloody organ of some sort.
CARDIOVASCULAR SYSTEM: No evidence of cardiovascular system found.
GASTROINTESTINAL SYSTEM:  The stomach contains very little undigested food, which is unsurprising as ice cream melts very quickly once inside of you.  Stomach walls and opening of intestines have a squishiness factor of 87.
URINARY SYSTEM: Gross.
TOXICOLOGY: Sample of right pleural blood and bile are submitted for toxicologic analysis.
SEROLOGY: A sample of right pleural blood is submitted in the EDTA tube. Routine toxicologic studies were ordered.
LABORATORY DATA
Completed by Scott Horne, Ninja on Thursdays
Cerebrospinal fluid culture and sensitivity:
Gram stain: Unremarkable.  Not worth engaging in combat on a Thursday.
Culture: Not enough to warrant nunchucks.
Separated Limb:  Not that gross after all.  He has seen worse, and Ms. Redd is just a wimp.
Attractive Female:  Confirmed attractive specimen.
Toxicology:  Unusually high proportion of midi-chlorians
Familiarity:  Mr. Horne has not seen this elk on Thursday, but more importantly, the elk did not see him on Thursday.  No one ever sees him.
EVIDENCE COLLECTED:
1. One (1) trembling aspen poplar branch, stuck to the bloody leg.
2. Testimony from Ms. Cougar that she has no idea how the elk died and she was just happy to help in identifying the body to Fish and Wildlife Officers and was definitely not hanging around for a tasty treat.  How very kind of her.
3. Bullet, lodged in front limb.  Discarded as it likely has no relevance to case.
4. One (1) phone number from attractive brunette.  Score.
5. Samples of Blood (type O+), and brain tissue (type gooey).
6. One postmortem CT scan.  To be completed at a future point, if I have time.
7. Four (4) chunks of ice, pulled from hair and flesh.
OPINION
Time of Death: Body temperature, witness testimony, Royal Elks day planner, and absence of stomach contents approximate the time of death between 7:30 PM on November 10th, 2013 and this morning a 9 AM.
Immediate Cause of Death: Asphyxia due to over-consumption of ice cream treats.
Manner of Death: Homicide
Remarks: Right ear piercing conclusively demonstrates the decedent to be a homosexual.  Death as result of a revolting hate crime then seems obvious.  Probable perpetrators are roving mobs of Italian gelato vendors, known for having both access to ice cream treats and disdain of effeminate males.  Body would have then been stashed in a snow drift that crusted over.  Leg probably wrenched free as Fish and Wildlife Officer tried to free the body from the mound of ice.  Note: investigate truck owner for connections to gelato mob; mode of transportation indicates possible sympathizer with mob ideals.  Mutilation of front right leg probably related to body modification experiment gone wrong, noting proliferation of such among young elk these days.
Also concluded that attractive female is dissatisfied with current relationship.
//Dallin Mendenhall, BA
Cafe Chi County Coroner's Office
December 12, 2013