Just
as he’d requested in the Mid Town Reporter, the flowers were all made
of papier-mâché. They were orange. And green. No other colors. The pall
bearers wore suits of black, against which the brightly colored paper
looked like a gift from a well-meaning, but naïve child, the kind of
gift that a parent couldn’t dream of turning down, but clenched still
at the thought of accepting.
And in a way, they were.
Just as surely as Graham Dixon lay in that shiny orange casket, these
people, these mourners, they had fathered him and birthed him and given
him life. Then they killed him.
They deserved to wear the stupid fake flowers.
-- From "Foolish Notions"
The
Senator’s death was a textbook shooting. Muldaine had taken one slug in
the temple and died instantly. His body slumped in the leather desk
chair, and his head lay back, eyes still open, staring in vain at the
office’s high ceiling.
The intern wasn’t so lucky. His
body lay in the doorway, arms and legs spread out like a stomped
spider. He had taken eight rounds, three in his chest, one in his right
kneecap, two in his face, and the remaining two in his right arm. The
bullets that had disfigured his face had done most of the damage. One
had taken his left eye and left a bleeding, empty socket in its place.
The other had shattered his jaw, exposing the muscle and bone of his
cheek. The three chest shots were clean—though none of them had pierced
his heart. The shot to the knee had made walking away impossible. With
any luck, he had passed out before he died. But judging by the pained
grimace on his face, that hadn’t been the case.
And there was the matter of the word “Atlanta” he had scrawled in his own blood on the hardwood floor.
-- From "Lucky Strikes"
In
the movies, bars always have cool names and are filled with happy
people chatting up supermodels. Sure there is usually one moping
character amid the clamor of noise and festiveness. But Palmer’s wasn’t
like that at all. The place was quiet as an unwritten symphony and the
crowd—though there couldn’t be more than a dozen people inside, none of
whom were remotely close to supermodel status—sipped from their glasses
in silence, each too burdened with his or her own business to spare a
thought for anyone else’s. The place didn’t even smell like smoke.
-- From "Fear and Frenzy"
The
man who killed me wore a tattoo of Santa Claus across his chest. The
old elf in the red suit sat in his sleigh, moist with the man’s sweat
in spite of the night’s chill, and his reindeer jerked with every
shudder my murderer made as the icy breeze kissed his bare skin.
-- From "Sin and Error Pining"
She
had never been the type of person to see the world in black and white.
There had always been just too damn much, well, gray wherever she
looked. In spite of all her private Protestant schoolteachers had done
to instill Southern fundamentalist categories of good and evil in her,
she just didn’t buy it. It was a load of crap, as far as she was
concerned.
Still, even with all that, even when her
mind told her it was just a compartment people had invented for storing
ideals they disagreed with, she somehow knew that the man standing over
her was plain, through and through evil.
-- From "Farewell"
Larry
Moore stood mixed in the crowd, the wet shoulders of his raincoat
bumping against those of the other onlookers as they pushed toward the
front of the police line. He smelled the gladiatorial bloodlust as the
curious smashed together to witness the city’s demolition crew reduce
2341 Old Smith Street to a few hundred square feet of rubble. Even
through the hazy drizzle he could smell it. Like a mixture of soured
upholstery and human sweat.
People always turn out for destruction, he thought with a smirk.
-- From "The Framework Soul"
Tony
Tanaka fancied himself a gangster in the Hollywood tradition. Born
Tanaka Yasuo and so named by his parents, he had long since dropped the
Japanese custom of using his family name first and his given name at
all in favor of the nickname “Anthony” or usually just “Tony” in order
to appear less like just another member of the Yakuza. More prone to
grandiose gestures than real bouts of forethought and planning, and
more apt to make stupid mistakes that tended to get his movie mentors
caught or killed than to keep a low profile and work behind the scenes,
he should have been a pushover. An easy kill.
The only thing was, well, he had played us all for fools. Just like the cliché.
-- From "The Subtraction Agenda"
Something
heavy and hard slammed into my back. I tried to twist and roll with the
impact but its force kept me careening forward, falling out of the sky,
until the cement walkway of Bishop Port Park stopped us both a few feet
in front of the statue of Alexander D. Bishop.
I
pushed myself up from the hole I had made and pushed the hair out of my
face. I gazed up at the monument of Alex Bishop, I guess to apologize
for wrecking his park, and I smiled faintly and shook my head. I stood
up and turned around, finally able to see what had taken me out so
easily.
The top two floors of the Simmons building.
-- From "A Gathering of Angels"
The
woman across the table from me wasn’t really a woman at all. She had no
real skin to speak of or any kind of humanity other than the feminine
shape she had forced her new body of light and energy to look like. Her
arms and legs may have been covered up with regular clothes like the
rest of us wore, but the way I could see through the parts of her
shiny, twinkling form that weren’t covered by clothing reminded me all
over again how she was no longer human.
-- From "It's Christmas, Baby, Please Come Home"
I blame it all on Franz Suppé.
Without his genius, Joanna and I could have lived a world of
bickering happiness, filled with soccer games and dance recitals, a
life of too many family events and not enough hours to accomplish them.
Without his damn overture, we might never have discovered that we were
more than normal, less than free.
-- From "Elements and Angels"
Mom,” he said, pointing up at the top of St. Anne’s Cathedral. “It moved.”
“What moved, honey?”
He hated it when she called him sweet names like “honey” or
“baby.” She never seemed to call him just son or John anymore, not
since the accident. And his baby brother, Edward, never got baby names.
“The angel moved,” he said, his voice cracking as he fought the spots
the sun was putting in his eyes. “The angel on the church.”
-- From "Angels of Our Better Nature"
No comments:
Post a Comment