Cemetery Street - John Zunski (good novels to read in english .txt) š
- Author: John Zunski
Book online Ā«Cemetery Street - John Zunski (good novels to read in english .txt) šĀ». Author John Zunski
waited some more. āThis oneās for you,ā I said aloud as I hopped out of my car. My breath floated skyward as I trudged over the trestle.
Standing in front of the tunnelās entrance, I peered into oblivion. Unlike the last time, there wasnāt sunlight summoning me to the other side. I peered into an open grave. From deep inside the steady, unending drip of water beckoned, the clamorous chorus of rats taunted.
I donāt know how long I worked up my nerve. Goddamn it, I berated myself, Countās in a war and Iām too big a pussy to walk through a dark tunnel. I took a deep breath and stepped inside. Rawness enveloped me. I was assailed by the moist rot, the decay - the smell of the grave. I should have turned around.
My foot searched for the next railroad tie. Despite the freezing temperature, sweat broke on my forehead. I imagined being in a minefield, the railroad ties, my passage out; the doink, doink, doink, of dripping water ricocheted past my ears like bullets. My heart pounded against my chest. To my left, a family of rats protested my presence. I whimpered. One tie at a time, I reminded myself as I plunged into the heart of darkness.
I heard a low rumble. I turned, expecting to see the glaring headlights of an eastbound freight. Nothing, just darkness, blessed darkness. I held my breath - concentrating, listening for a distant rumble. A quiet hum seeped through the darkness. āItās just Cromby,ā I reassured myself. Cromby was a nearby coal burning power plant, its burps and hiccups filled the night. āItās just Cromby,ā I repeated aloud; my voice reverberated off the tunnel walls. I increased my pace. I cursed myself for not bringing a flashlight.
With every step the rumble became steadier. Trying to ignore my fears, I quickened my pace, working deeper into the tunnel. Aside the track bed, the ratās squeals became frenzied, overhead, bats swooshed by. Underneath my feet, the railroad bed rocked. I froze. That aināt Cromby. I refused to look, convinced that if I didnāt, my menace would go away. The rumble grew into thunder, beneath me, the ground shook. āFuck!ā I screamed; my voice echoed off the walls. I glanced over my shoulder. An east boundās headlights illuminated the curve in the track just over the trestle.
I sprinted deeper into the tunnel, futilely racing the freight to the far side. I kept my head down, looking at the railroad ties pass under feet. You can do it! You can beat it! Do it for Count! Wind rushed past my ears; my lungs filled with cold sooty air. The trainās lights pierced the tunnel. It chased me. Night became day. In front of me my shadow raced, at least it beat the freight to the other side. Horrified, I stopped. I wasnāt halfway through. The tunnel quivered. The trainās horn blared, its echoes repeating its demand for my surrender. I turned and faced the approaching banshee, staring into its blinding lights. I remembered Shannie on that June day. I wondered what sheād think about this. I wondered if sheād scream for me as I did for her. To his credit, the engineer didnāt break - what was the use? Calm overtook me as the freight charged. I pondered if the engineer was the same as that June day; I wondered what he thought ā if he even cared. To him, I was another nut with a death wish.
I stood motionless as the banshee came closer - its horn screaming. With all my might, I jumped to my right. For a brief second, I felt suspended in mid air. Then my right leg and hip exploded with pain. I screamed; my cry swallowed by the freightās fury. This is whatās it like to be freight trained, I thought, remembering the day Count creamed me in Fernwood ā his hit seemed much worse. A chill washed over me. I reached down relieved to find my leg attached. I sighed realizing the train didnāt hit me. I had crashed into a freezing puddle lapping against the tunnel wall. The puddle didnāt save me from a nasty case of road rash, a souvenir from the track bed. My leg and hip still bear its scars.
I remembered Russellās story and pictured him in the same position. Mere feet away, the freightās clanking wheels were deafening. Russell was right, they sounded like chains. āThe clanking chains of a bansheeās pall,ā Russellās gravelly voice replayed itself. I groaned and buried my head under my arms. Closing my eyes tight, I waited for the freight to pass, seconds seemed like hours. As I cowered, a weird sensation overtook the pain. Rats were crawling over my legs. One stood perched on my hip, wiggling its whiskers at me. I heard my scream over the freightās metallic chorus ā I leapt to my feet and ran against the trainās windblast.
When the train passed, I stopped running. I stood trembling, gasping for breath. Diesel fumes soaked the damp, frigid air. My phlegmy coughs bounced around the tunnel, drowning the bats banter. Watching the flashing red taillight disappear around the corner, I never imagined that Count was already on his way home.
I sprinted out of the tunnel. If anything happens to him, itāll be my fucking fault! I jumped into my hooptie and cranked the heater. My teeth rattled in the heaterās blast. Nothingās going to happen, itās just a stupid legend!
At home, I took a long hot shower, shivering in the steam. I shivered my way under the blankets and shivered myself to sleep. When dreams came, I shivered myself awake as the rat squealed and wiggled its whiskers, condemning me for being reckless with my friendās life. Bolting, I sat shivering at attention in my dark bedroom, drowning in a cold sweat, my head pounded to the echoes of the rushing freight.
I shivered as the pipe organ sprang to life, relieving me of the ratās image. In front of the church, the reverend stepped away from the lectern and made his way across the altar. Someplace deep inside, something gave way; my jaw quivered, my sobs erupted.
My fatherās whisper replaced the ratās squeal, āSuck it up, bud. Hey, donāt cry.ā Tears flooded over me, I buried my face into his shoulder. I bit my lower lip, hoping the pain would distract the tears. āSuck it up James,ā dad ordered slapping my back. Around us the congregation burst into song.
Shannie wrapped her arm around my waist, snatching me away from my father. āLet it go Just James,ā Shannie whispered into my ear. āLet it go, itās okay.ā Clinging to her, I trembled violently. I buried my head in her chest, my tears soaked her black dress. Through my sobs, my ears found her heart, its beat ever soothing, the softness of her breast caressed my cheek. Laying her head upon my shoulder, her breath danced on my neck. Her arms held me tight, reaffirming what her heartbeat told me ā that she would always be there, she would never abandon me. I quivered with her touch. I needed her - Iāve always needed her - now more than ever!
A minute, maybe two, I donāt know how long we sat like this when I felt her lips atop of my head. āJust James,ā she whispered, āI have to give the eulogy.ā I squeezed her, begging her to stay at my side. Shannie leaving would be a constant in both our lives.
By shear force of will, Shannie rose, her grief shelved for the task at hand. A cough broke the silence as she glided to the lectern. She paused, taking in the sea of faces. Her untamed hair, strewn about by an imaginary gale, belied her composed face. Her ashen skin contrasted against her black dress. She fumbled for her glasses. Oval spectacles framed her bloodshot eyes. She sighed.
āWords usually donāt escape me,ā Shannie began; her small voice booming over the churchās PA. āToday theyāve abandoned me. Iāve looked everywhere, but I canāt find them. I looked in the trees we climbed as little kids - but they werenāt there. Iāve looked up and down the sidewalks of Beyford - but I didn't find them there. Iāve searched through his possessions, even looking under the seat of his truck - I didnāt find them there. I searched his letters home, hoping to find words amidst the grains of sand from the Arabian desert - but they werenāt there either."
āIf I found them, could they describe our feelings? Can words explain grief? Does sorrow come close to describing the feeling in our hearts? Does loneliness describe the emptiness that consumes us? Does shock explain our numbness? Does desperate describe the need to see his face, hear his voice? Does anger define the inferno raging in our stomachs?"
"If they did, so what? Despite all our hopes and prayers, words wonāt bring him back. Maybe itās better that the words stay lost, I think if I found them theyād be inadequate. How could words describe such a person. A single name couldnāt contain his spirit; some of us know him as Leroy, or Leroy, Jr. or Junior or whatever. Some of us know him as Count.ā For a brief second, Shannieās eyes locked on mine. āIām sure he has knick-names none of us know. Just as names fail to describe his spirit, can we trust words to describe his persona? Can they serve Count as he served his family, friends, and country? I know him to be a hero, a protector, friend, critic, wise ass, stooge, aggravating, aloof, sometimes aggravatingly aloof, nosey, sometimes overly so, socially aware; heās the closest Iāve ever had to a big brother.ā Shannie paused, nodding her head, āhe is my big brother. I only have to look out to see that he is a son, saviorā¦ā
The good minister winced on that account, apparently forgetting the circumstances. Shannie continued:
āā¦boyfriend, lover, friend, favorite son, and yet, some feared him.ā Someone in the congregation coughed. āObviously they deserved to see that side, for they were incapable of seeing what there is to love, admire, and emulate.
āStill, words are inadequate. Maybe thatās the point. Maybe neatly wrapping up a life in a few moments is unjust. Maybe their inadequacy allows Count to remain alive within and amongst us. I take consolation that words distinguish but do not define our feelings. Somehow finding those lost words would snatch from us the meaning he worked so hard to attain and for which he gave his life. Despite this, I still canāt help searching for the missing words.ā
Shannie cast her head down, her eyes glancing at the aisle in front of Countās casket. She smiled ā it was a quiet smile, not loud enough to break the churchās silence. She stepped down, stopping to embrace Flossy and Bear before returning to our pew.
A breeze drifted across Fernwood. The seasonās first warmth embraced Countās mourners. The boisterous morning settled into a calm afternoon, nary a bird stirred; nature seemed to be watching. Looking past Countās casket, I studied the budding trees standing between my house and the cemetery, half expecting to see myself sitting high in the limbs, watching, like I have so many times before. Through the bare limbs I caught glimpse of the sun reflecting off my bedroom window, peering at the canopied grave.
āIn sure and certain hope of the resurrection to eternal life through the Lord Jesus Christ,ā the good reverend crooned, āwe commend to Almighty God our brother Leroy, and commit his body to the ground. Earth to earth, ashes to ashes, dust to dust, the Lord bless him and keep himā¦ā
The voyeuristic sunbeam caught my attention again and I glanced towards my bedroom window, thankful for the distraction. Glaring at the reflection, I imagined an
Standing in front of the tunnelās entrance, I peered into oblivion. Unlike the last time, there wasnāt sunlight summoning me to the other side. I peered into an open grave. From deep inside the steady, unending drip of water beckoned, the clamorous chorus of rats taunted.
I donāt know how long I worked up my nerve. Goddamn it, I berated myself, Countās in a war and Iām too big a pussy to walk through a dark tunnel. I took a deep breath and stepped inside. Rawness enveloped me. I was assailed by the moist rot, the decay - the smell of the grave. I should have turned around.
My foot searched for the next railroad tie. Despite the freezing temperature, sweat broke on my forehead. I imagined being in a minefield, the railroad ties, my passage out; the doink, doink, doink, of dripping water ricocheted past my ears like bullets. My heart pounded against my chest. To my left, a family of rats protested my presence. I whimpered. One tie at a time, I reminded myself as I plunged into the heart of darkness.
I heard a low rumble. I turned, expecting to see the glaring headlights of an eastbound freight. Nothing, just darkness, blessed darkness. I held my breath - concentrating, listening for a distant rumble. A quiet hum seeped through the darkness. āItās just Cromby,ā I reassured myself. Cromby was a nearby coal burning power plant, its burps and hiccups filled the night. āItās just Cromby,ā I repeated aloud; my voice reverberated off the tunnel walls. I increased my pace. I cursed myself for not bringing a flashlight.
With every step the rumble became steadier. Trying to ignore my fears, I quickened my pace, working deeper into the tunnel. Aside the track bed, the ratās squeals became frenzied, overhead, bats swooshed by. Underneath my feet, the railroad bed rocked. I froze. That aināt Cromby. I refused to look, convinced that if I didnāt, my menace would go away. The rumble grew into thunder, beneath me, the ground shook. āFuck!ā I screamed; my voice echoed off the walls. I glanced over my shoulder. An east boundās headlights illuminated the curve in the track just over the trestle.
I sprinted deeper into the tunnel, futilely racing the freight to the far side. I kept my head down, looking at the railroad ties pass under feet. You can do it! You can beat it! Do it for Count! Wind rushed past my ears; my lungs filled with cold sooty air. The trainās lights pierced the tunnel. It chased me. Night became day. In front of me my shadow raced, at least it beat the freight to the other side. Horrified, I stopped. I wasnāt halfway through. The tunnel quivered. The trainās horn blared, its echoes repeating its demand for my surrender. I turned and faced the approaching banshee, staring into its blinding lights. I remembered Shannie on that June day. I wondered what sheād think about this. I wondered if sheād scream for me as I did for her. To his credit, the engineer didnāt break - what was the use? Calm overtook me as the freight charged. I pondered if the engineer was the same as that June day; I wondered what he thought ā if he even cared. To him, I was another nut with a death wish.
I stood motionless as the banshee came closer - its horn screaming. With all my might, I jumped to my right. For a brief second, I felt suspended in mid air. Then my right leg and hip exploded with pain. I screamed; my cry swallowed by the freightās fury. This is whatās it like to be freight trained, I thought, remembering the day Count creamed me in Fernwood ā his hit seemed much worse. A chill washed over me. I reached down relieved to find my leg attached. I sighed realizing the train didnāt hit me. I had crashed into a freezing puddle lapping against the tunnel wall. The puddle didnāt save me from a nasty case of road rash, a souvenir from the track bed. My leg and hip still bear its scars.
I remembered Russellās story and pictured him in the same position. Mere feet away, the freightās clanking wheels were deafening. Russell was right, they sounded like chains. āThe clanking chains of a bansheeās pall,ā Russellās gravelly voice replayed itself. I groaned and buried my head under my arms. Closing my eyes tight, I waited for the freight to pass, seconds seemed like hours. As I cowered, a weird sensation overtook the pain. Rats were crawling over my legs. One stood perched on my hip, wiggling its whiskers at me. I heard my scream over the freightās metallic chorus ā I leapt to my feet and ran against the trainās windblast.
When the train passed, I stopped running. I stood trembling, gasping for breath. Diesel fumes soaked the damp, frigid air. My phlegmy coughs bounced around the tunnel, drowning the bats banter. Watching the flashing red taillight disappear around the corner, I never imagined that Count was already on his way home.
I sprinted out of the tunnel. If anything happens to him, itāll be my fucking fault! I jumped into my hooptie and cranked the heater. My teeth rattled in the heaterās blast. Nothingās going to happen, itās just a stupid legend!
At home, I took a long hot shower, shivering in the steam. I shivered my way under the blankets and shivered myself to sleep. When dreams came, I shivered myself awake as the rat squealed and wiggled its whiskers, condemning me for being reckless with my friendās life. Bolting, I sat shivering at attention in my dark bedroom, drowning in a cold sweat, my head pounded to the echoes of the rushing freight.
I shivered as the pipe organ sprang to life, relieving me of the ratās image. In front of the church, the reverend stepped away from the lectern and made his way across the altar. Someplace deep inside, something gave way; my jaw quivered, my sobs erupted.
My fatherās whisper replaced the ratās squeal, āSuck it up, bud. Hey, donāt cry.ā Tears flooded over me, I buried my face into his shoulder. I bit my lower lip, hoping the pain would distract the tears. āSuck it up James,ā dad ordered slapping my back. Around us the congregation burst into song.
Shannie wrapped her arm around my waist, snatching me away from my father. āLet it go Just James,ā Shannie whispered into my ear. āLet it go, itās okay.ā Clinging to her, I trembled violently. I buried my head in her chest, my tears soaked her black dress. Through my sobs, my ears found her heart, its beat ever soothing, the softness of her breast caressed my cheek. Laying her head upon my shoulder, her breath danced on my neck. Her arms held me tight, reaffirming what her heartbeat told me ā that she would always be there, she would never abandon me. I quivered with her touch. I needed her - Iāve always needed her - now more than ever!
A minute, maybe two, I donāt know how long we sat like this when I felt her lips atop of my head. āJust James,ā she whispered, āI have to give the eulogy.ā I squeezed her, begging her to stay at my side. Shannie leaving would be a constant in both our lives.
By shear force of will, Shannie rose, her grief shelved for the task at hand. A cough broke the silence as she glided to the lectern. She paused, taking in the sea of faces. Her untamed hair, strewn about by an imaginary gale, belied her composed face. Her ashen skin contrasted against her black dress. She fumbled for her glasses. Oval spectacles framed her bloodshot eyes. She sighed.
āWords usually donāt escape me,ā Shannie began; her small voice booming over the churchās PA. āToday theyāve abandoned me. Iāve looked everywhere, but I canāt find them. I looked in the trees we climbed as little kids - but they werenāt there. Iāve looked up and down the sidewalks of Beyford - but I didn't find them there. Iāve searched through his possessions, even looking under the seat of his truck - I didnāt find them there. I searched his letters home, hoping to find words amidst the grains of sand from the Arabian desert - but they werenāt there either."
āIf I found them, could they describe our feelings? Can words explain grief? Does sorrow come close to describing the feeling in our hearts? Does loneliness describe the emptiness that consumes us? Does shock explain our numbness? Does desperate describe the need to see his face, hear his voice? Does anger define the inferno raging in our stomachs?"
"If they did, so what? Despite all our hopes and prayers, words wonāt bring him back. Maybe itās better that the words stay lost, I think if I found them theyād be inadequate. How could words describe such a person. A single name couldnāt contain his spirit; some of us know him as Leroy, or Leroy, Jr. or Junior or whatever. Some of us know him as Count.ā For a brief second, Shannieās eyes locked on mine. āIām sure he has knick-names none of us know. Just as names fail to describe his spirit, can we trust words to describe his persona? Can they serve Count as he served his family, friends, and country? I know him to be a hero, a protector, friend, critic, wise ass, stooge, aggravating, aloof, sometimes aggravatingly aloof, nosey, sometimes overly so, socially aware; heās the closest Iāve ever had to a big brother.ā Shannie paused, nodding her head, āhe is my big brother. I only have to look out to see that he is a son, saviorā¦ā
The good minister winced on that account, apparently forgetting the circumstances. Shannie continued:
āā¦boyfriend, lover, friend, favorite son, and yet, some feared him.ā Someone in the congregation coughed. āObviously they deserved to see that side, for they were incapable of seeing what there is to love, admire, and emulate.
āStill, words are inadequate. Maybe thatās the point. Maybe neatly wrapping up a life in a few moments is unjust. Maybe their inadequacy allows Count to remain alive within and amongst us. I take consolation that words distinguish but do not define our feelings. Somehow finding those lost words would snatch from us the meaning he worked so hard to attain and for which he gave his life. Despite this, I still canāt help searching for the missing words.ā
Shannie cast her head down, her eyes glancing at the aisle in front of Countās casket. She smiled ā it was a quiet smile, not loud enough to break the churchās silence. She stepped down, stopping to embrace Flossy and Bear before returning to our pew.
A breeze drifted across Fernwood. The seasonās first warmth embraced Countās mourners. The boisterous morning settled into a calm afternoon, nary a bird stirred; nature seemed to be watching. Looking past Countās casket, I studied the budding trees standing between my house and the cemetery, half expecting to see myself sitting high in the limbs, watching, like I have so many times before. Through the bare limbs I caught glimpse of the sun reflecting off my bedroom window, peering at the canopied grave.
āIn sure and certain hope of the resurrection to eternal life through the Lord Jesus Christ,ā the good reverend crooned, āwe commend to Almighty God our brother Leroy, and commit his body to the ground. Earth to earth, ashes to ashes, dust to dust, the Lord bless him and keep himā¦ā
The voyeuristic sunbeam caught my attention again and I glanced towards my bedroom window, thankful for the distraction. Glaring at the reflection, I imagined an
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