Body Politic: Stories of Politics and Fear
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“What I’m telling you is, this is temporary. Okay? Believe me. I may not be a scientist but I can tell you that. It’s temporary. In the meantime we got the best armed forces and police responders in the world keeping us safe. These guys, right here,” He indicated the soldiers. “Aren’t they great? Great guys.”
“But, sir?” Elliott appeared starstruck as he stepped forward. “I mean, Mr. President. Isn’t it true that CNN was reporting that most of our military had simply disappeared? How do you account for that?”
“Fake news,” said Tucker, and pointed at Carson, who had taken off his MAGA hat and raised his hand. “You. Your hat was fine, by the way.”
Laughter.
“Sir, I just wanted to know what you intend to do next; and what your thoughts are on the situation right here. Right now. We’ve got dead needing to be buried, for one—or at least moved to where those things can’t, well, you know, scavenge off—”
“Like the head laying against the limo’s front tire,” said Rory.
They all glanced out the windows—and at the little girl standing in front of them, who was looking out at the thing. She must have saw their reflections because she turned to face them as they watched.
“It keeps staring at me,” she said—prompting Tess to hurry toward her, cajoling her, before quickly ushering her away.
Everyone just looked at each other. “I’ll, ah—I’ll sit down and take your answer,” said Carson.
Wayne Kyle Spitzer
Wayne Kyle Spitzer (born July 15, 1966) is an American author and low-budget horror filmmaker from Spokane, Washington. He is the writer/director of the short horror film, Shadows in the Garden, as well as the author of Flashback, an SF/horror novel published in 1993. Spitzer's non-genre writing has appeared in subTerrain Magazine: Strong Words for a Polite Nation and Columbia: The Magazine of Northwest History. His recent fiction includes The Ferryman Pentalogy, consisting of Comes a Ferryman, The Tempter and the Taker, The Pierced Veil, Black Hole, White Fountain, and To the End of Ursathrax, as well as The X-Ray Rider Trilogy and a screen adaptation of Algernon Blackwood’s The Willows.
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Body Politic - Wayne Kyle Spitzer
BODY POLITIC
STORIES OF POLITICS AND FEAR
by
Wayne Kyle Spitzer
Copyright © 2020 Wayne Kyle Spitzer. All Rights Reserved. Published by Hobb’s End Books, a division of ACME Sprockets & Visions. Cover design Copyright © 2020 Wayne Kyle Spitzer. Please direct all inquiries to: [email protected]
All characters appearing in this work are fictitious. Any resemblance to real persons, living or dead, is purely coincidental. This book contains material protected under International and Federal Copyright Laws and Treaties. Any unauthorized reprint or use of this book is prohibited. No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system without express written permission from the author. This ebook is licensed for your personal enjoyment only. This ebook may not be re-sold or given away to other people. If you would like to share this book with another person, please purchase an additional copy for each recipient. If you are reading this book and did not purchase it, or it was not purchased for your use only, then please purchase your own copy. Thank you for respecting the hard work of this author.
COUNTRY ROADS
What’d you think?
I asked the bouncer—a gargantuan brother named Pinky; I didn’t ask—on the way out, even as the jukebox began to play and the room began to return to normal, meaning loud.
"Hmph," he hmphed, staring straight ahead, keeping an eye on the boys in the MAGA hats. I think you’re lucky to be getting out of here alive.
That’s live comedy,
I said—a little dickishly, now that I remember it. It’s no country for snowflakes. This brother brings it.
Call it a manic response to the thrill of the kill—because that’s precisely what I’d done, killed it—though not so manic that I didn’t ask him for an escort to my car.
He lingered, seeming pensive, as I got in and started the engine—enough so that I rolled down my window and asked him, You really didn’t like it, did you?
He shrugged his massive shoulders. My job is to spot trouble and eliminate it. Not to stir it up. But I do think … you said you were from New York?
I live there, that’s right. Going home to visit family. Thought I’d line up some gigs along the way.
The man laughed a little. That’s right. You mentioned that in your routine. ‘Haven’t left my borough since those Mexicans flew them planes into the towers’—that was good.
I looked at him expectantly, wanting to know what it was he thought.
Oh. It’s just that … Well, you should get out of New York more. See the country. Be good for your comedy.
I wasn’t sure how to take that. Yeah. Well. Keep an eye on those rednecks. At least until I’m down the road?
He nodded as I put the car in gear. There won’t be any more trouble. That I can guarantee.
I gave him the Peace sign.
And then I was off—into the Kentucky night which sweated and lay silent across the fields. Into a damp fog which reminded me of New York—and was at the same time completely foreign.
It didn’t take long to start comparing the bucolic beauty of the state by day, with its rolling horse farms and verdant, bluegrass pastures, with its indistinctiveness at night. It was like driving anywhere, even upstate New York (except for the complete lack of other vehicles and the plethora of Donald Trump campaign signs, which seemed to stand sentinel in every other field). To tell the truth, I was beginning to nod off when a headlight appeared in my rear-view mirror—just one, a motorcycle, maybe, or a car with a burned-out lamp—and began closing the distance between us. It’s funny because I remember thinking distinctly that it was moving too fast—a cop, maybe—which bore out quickly as the little sun grew—resolving itself, at length, into the working headlamp of a dirty 4x4 pickup. A pickup now tailgating me at sixty-five miles-per-hour.
You got anything else to say, Lib-tard? Maybe you’ve got something to say about my girlfriend. Don’t be shy. I’m sure we all want to hear it.
I thought that was your wingman.
Keep talking ...
There was a pronounced jolt as the bumper of the truck hit my car, hard enough that it skewed a little on the damp pavement, and my heart leapt into my throat. Jesus, was it possible? It had been two hours since that exchange, two hours and a junction, there was no way—
Again the bumpers collided, and again there was a jolt.
Tell her you’re sorry.
The truck veered into the oncoming lane suddenly, accelerating, and I was forced to do likewise—I didn’t want them beside me. Didn’t want to know if they had weapons or not. Didn’t want—
Who? Your service animal? Or its mother?
I floored it as the truck’s battered quarter panel appeared outside my open window, hoping the little Camry’s V6 would open up, hoping it had more power than it seemed. It did—and I launched forward, causing the front of the truck to slide back, and the scenery to blur past with dizzying speed. I recall slapping the steering wheel like a pimply kid in his first car. Eat my dust, suckers! I’ll see you in Hell!
But the old pickup only roared forward like a rocket, instantly drawing alongside. That was the moment, of course. The moment I realized just how much trouble I was in. For what I saw outside my window was not just some car full of idiots. Rather, it was like something from a horror movie—Duel, maybe, of fucking Birth of a Nation. What I saw outside my window was a truck full of hooded men—like KKK members, only wearing brown instead of white—like scarecrows having sprung to life from the fields. Or executioners.
There were six of them in total, more than had been present in the bar (not that it mattered, they would have rounded up others, I was sure). The important thing is that it was them—the MAGA crew—of that I had little doubt. Three of them were crowded into the cab while three others rode in the payload—all of them wearing crudely-stitched burlap hoods—and each brandishing some form of weapon, whether that meant a pistol or a rifle or a rusty pitchfork. The truck, meanwhile, was right out of central casting—I’d seen others like it in the red states I’d already passed through. You’ve seen them too: those jacked-up tanks with the huge tires and pig-ear smoke stacks (their way of saying fuck you
to the environmentalists), and the twin flags crackling in their payloads—usually an American and a Don’t Tread on Me,
but sometimes a bona fide Confederate Southern cross, which is what this one had, along with one I couldn’t clearly see. All I can say for certain is that the men in the back put down their weapons as I watched and appeared to fiddle with something in the payload—I really couldn’t say because I had to look away in order to focus on the road.
Meanwhile it didn’t exactly surprise me to see that I—we—were going about 90 miles-per-hour—the fastest I’d ever traveled in a moving