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Authors: Max Andrew Dubinsky

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Dislocated

BOOK: Dislocated
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Dislocated.

by Max Andrew Dubinsky

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Dislocated was originally published online as the Dislocated Experience, an episodic graphic novel at DislocatedExperience.com in 2012.

 

This book is a work of fiction. The characters, incidents, and dialogue are from the author’s imagination and are not to be construed as real. Any resemblance to actual events or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.

 

Dislocated.

 

Copyright © 2012 Max Andrew Dubinsky

 

Cover art by Ariel Fitzgerald Vergez

Cover design by Matthew Desotell

 

All rights reserved. This work has been registered with the Library of Congress. No part of this book or website may be used or reproduced in any form whatsoever - except for brief quotations used in the purpose of review - without written permission from the author.

 

 

 

 

For Matthew

 

Thank you for trusting me with a great idea.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Acknowledgements

 

Lauren Dubinsky, Josh Lind, Yotam Dor,

Julianne Gulu, Joe Bunting, Jeff Goins,

and Ariel Fitzgerald Vergez

 

Thank you for putting up with me,

and for helping make this book possible.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

“Loneliness is the first thing

God’s eyes named not good.”

- John Milton, poet

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

PART I

 

 

 

 

 

1

I WONDER IF MARS IS NICE THIS TIME OF YEAR

 

The sun breaks through the windows this morning with a blistering intensity I’m not even close to appreciating. I wrap the sheets around my head, squeezing my eyes shut tighter than usual—bracing for some sort of impact like I’m on a plane plummeting from thirty-seven thousand feet. Or simply bracing for the impact of a new day, which sometimes can be just as bad, if not worse.

I’ve slept with my shoes on again.

It seems a decibel or two quieter this morning than I’m accustomed.

Insomniacs travel on an entirely different audio frequency than the rest of the world.

A dog barks in the distance, chasing cars, chasing tails.

Or it’s right outside my window.

My pillows smell of stale cigarette ash and sweat. I press my nose deep into them. A painful reminder of last night shoots through my face. I’m on my feet.

I clomp across the dusty carpet, dragging my naked body to the bathroom, careful not to trip on my laces. Last week in a moment of pure and utter inspiration, I moved the refrigerator to the bedroom, providing one less reason for me to leave this immediate area. I grab a beer on my way to the toilet, pressing the chilled aluminum to my swollen eyes. I drink, chasing painkillers. Upon inspection of my reflection, I determine the blackness of my eyes is consistent with my undesirable ability to remain awake—and having recently been hit in the face. I can’t recall a thing after that goon rearranged important parts of my insides with his fists. I regard my split and swollen lips with the respect they deserve, and wonder how it’s possible my wounds have already scabbed over. I poke my lip and wince. I think about shaving, and think about letting my beard grow just to spite Valerie. I pick dirt from beneath my fingernails, and contemplate how long I could go without showering, while everyone everywhere else is contemplating marriage and babies and cancer and how to send a man to Mars.

“Leslie?”

I tap on the bathroom wall like I’m in the business of cracking safes or hanging pictures.

Leslie seems to be running a bit late this morning.

I check my watch. Rub my wrist. What happened to my watch? Valerie bought me one for Christmas. 

I probably smashed it with a hammer.

I wonder if Mars is nice this time of year.

“Are you there? Leslie?”

I knock on the wall, but to no avail. This isn’t like her.

Leslie runs Buttercup Bakery on Market Street. She inherited the shop from her mother, and along with it, the hours. I’ve been working the C shift at the grocery three nights a week, and we tend to rendezvous in our designated bathrooms around the same time every morning. The other two days I get a reprieve from the C and work the B shift, but I still get up—I’m always up—when Leslie’s due in because since Valerie left, my tryst through these poorly constructed bathroom walls is the closest thing to a real relationship I’ve had in months.

Leslie worries I might be depressed. She’s convinced herself (not that I mind and not without my help) that I’m some sort of undercover cop—a Private Dick surrounded by cigarette smoke and beautiful dames and big brutes running surveillance on some crooks in our very own apartment building. Her very own apartment building. How exciting for her.

The most interesting things about me aren’t even true.

If Ricky wasn’t so desperate for the help, he’d keep me on graveyard five nights a week. The only customers perusing the aisles are overweight single mothers demonstrating poor parenting skills, and the local high school riff-raff high from copious amounts of cannabis looking for a midnight snack. And if Ricky and I hadn’t gone to school together, he wouldn’t have done me the favor of bringing me on at all. Something about hiring ex-criminals.

“At least I amounted to something. Everyone else in this town is permanently stoned, drunk, or managing a grocery store.”

“Fine.” Ricky handed my application back to me. “Ex-cons then. We don’t hire them.”

This was a ridiculous accusation. The closest I’ve ever come to being a convict was the weekend I spent in an overnight cell in New Orleans. And if the three hot meals a day, the Internet access, the pornography selection, and the hour of recreation time I received each day was any bit of foreshadowing on prison life, I was prepared to plead guilty. However, be it a higher power, guardian angels, predestination, or a perfect demonstration of the incompetence of our judicial system, my case never went to trial. I was free to go.

With my ear to the wall, I listen for the sounds of hairdryers and faucets. I imagine Leslie wearing only her underwear whenever she tells me about her day—black lace trim or pink bows depending on my mood. Sometimes I see her wiping off makeup or sitting on the toilet, but I think she’s got a shy bladder. I wonder if she even wears makeup to work since she works alone.

Buttercup Bakery makes a dynamite chocolate croissant. Leslie’s mother really got it right.

We pass each other in the hall every now and again when she’s got a day off. It turns out I’m a terrible conversationalist without the comfort of a plaster wall in my face.

I’m nervous for the rest of the day. Life has progressed without incident—uneventful and right on time—since Valerie deemed my return to this pathetic excuse for a town entirely inappropriate; a hindrance upon her mental healing. Unfortunately, I’d just signed the lease, and Ma had already filled my fridge with baked goods and cans of root beer, which is (her words, not mine): “…just like drinking real hooch.” I can only assume my entire day is now thrown off since Leslie’s gone AWOL.

I think about calling Valerie, hanging up when she says hello.

My clothes are in a pile next to the bathtub. I step out of my boots, and step on my jeans, feeling for a cell phone in the pockets.

I brush my teeth in my best attempt at being human again.

I consider going back to bed and pretending today never happened.

When my phone turns on, it informs me of three new messages. The date on the phone reads Wednesday. This must be a glitch or a network error. I could have sworn it was still Sunday last time I went to sleep. 

I rinse my mouth, spitting blood and two teeth into the sink.

 

Last night after work, some prick knocked me around over at The Salty Grog in a less than classic case of mistaken identity. (I was content to lie low and drink in the corner until every last girl in the place looked like Valerie, and I might stand going home with one of them.) All I heard was, “There you are, you son-of-a-bitch…” from behind before my face met a pair of overly accusatory fists.

After all the confusion and misplaced rage, the testosterone-fueled rhinoceros actually bought me a drink, put his arm around my shoulders, and offered me a ride home. I’d never seen the guy before, which is unusual for a town like this. Not that I’m anybody who knows everybody, but it’s hard not to make yourself known around here. He was looking for some guy named Adam, and Adam and I apparently carry ourselves in very similar fashions. 

“From behind,” the rhinoceros kept saying, “you and Adam…” then he’d wave his hand around in a frustrated gesture like one does when they’re at the zoo on a hot summer’s day visiting the monkey cages. Swatting flies he’d say, “I could have sworn…”

My back was to him when he found me. Eddy, the bartender, was telling me about the horses up at the McKaden’s farm. “Dead. Every last one of ‘em.” The McKaden’s live twenty-some odd minutes outside of town, on the edge of the woods that trickle down and cross the border from Pennsylvania. Dorothy McKaden inherited the farm from her father, and they’ve been breeding horses for as long as I can remember. 

“Some high school prank,” somebody’s grandfather sitting next to me said. “Devil worshipping miscreants…” he trailed off, drowning his words in his beer as I tried to comprehend the manpower and skill set it would take to properly execute a horse with nothing short of a sawed-off shotgun. I recalled two old ladies carrying bags full of apples and adult diapers at the grocery store, talking about dead horses on their way out while I pushed a train of shopping carts back in. I thought it was an odd topic to be discussing, but didn’t think much of it as I’m not exactly known for my stimulating banter.

“A filthy mess,” Eddy said. “Detectives involved and everything.” I swallowed my beer, and Eddy refilled it without asking. “Not only horses,” he was rambling by then, leaning across the bar on his forearms. Eddy loves a good conspiracy. A plane can’t fly overhead without him telling you about chemtrails, population control, and brainwashing. Pennies jumped from the pocket of his collared shirt, scattering in all directions. He didn’t seem to notice. Every time he finds a penny, Eddy picks it up regardless of luck. “But birds too.” I pocketed some of the stray coins instead of giving them back. “Birds?” I asked.

“Birds that won’t fly,” Eddy said.

“What’s this have to do with dead horses, Eddy?”

“No, no. You don’t get me.” Eddy had gotten close enough at this point, even with the bar between us, that I couldn’t blame anyone for assuming we were star-crossed lovers about to go home together. “Strange things are happening to the animals out here,” he whispered. “I’m talking about birds that won’t fly. Like something in the sky is keeping them on the ground.”

“Sasquatch.” the old-timer mumbled and hiccupped.

I told him there was no such thing. “There are no monsters in our closets, just skeletons.” I nursed my third round, eyes on the door through the mirror behind the bar. Just in case. There are only three bars in this town, and if you stick with the same one seven nights a week, odds are on your side that you’ll eventually find the person you’re looking for—or trying to avoid. 

At some point I glanced away from the mirror just long enough to miss the rhino’s stealth approach from behind, and it wasn’t until he finished macerating my face that he realized he’d been knocking in the teeth of some guy who wasn’t, in fact, Adam at all.

“Hey, hey, hey!” Eddy interrupted, my face unpleasantly situated between the wooden bar top and my new friend’s wooden hands. “There must be some sort of mistake here. Will didn’t do anything to deserve that, did you, Will?”

Eddy, always thinking the best of me. I’m sure I did something, somewhere, to someone at least once—most likely twice—to deserve such a pounding.

“Will?” someone asked to make sure they heard another’s words correctly. I was too busy making sure the spilled beer on the counter wasn’t going to waste. So I just said, “Huh?”

“You know this guy?” the rhino asked Eddy, and my skull was set free.

“Of course I do. That’s Sue and Ned Scott’s son.” Eddy said this like it was a common fact everyone should know. Two plus two is four. Grass is green. Water is wet. I’m Sue and Ned Scott’s son.

A round on the rhino, and he straightened my jacket, patted my face. “No harm done then, yeah?”

BOOK: Dislocated
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