Fight Song (7 page)

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Authors: Joshua Mohr

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BOOK: Fight Song
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Bob Coffen stands in his kitchen, waiting for the macaroni to reach the right softness so he can pull the pot off the burner. He sips from a tumbler of vodka and watches his son, Brent, play one of Bob’s signature games, Disemboweler IV: Let’s Get Bloody!

In this final installment of the franchise, the game chronicles the carnal sojourns of cannibals traipsing through post-apocalyptic America in the hopes of disemboweling the last surviving citizens of this once-proud nation and chomping on their flesh. Right as one lucky cannibal is about to dig in and feast on a victim, they shout to their cohorts, “Let’s get bloody!” Once a cannibal croons this signature line, the corresponding graphics never fail to render a scene rich in slaughter, fantastic scribbles of innards and organs.

Brent is good at it, too—perhaps genetically inclined. No normal nine-year-old would be so gifted at these games that readily stump people twice his age. Brent’s cannibal dominates the action. In fact, he now rips out another character’s larynx and munches away on it, holding the larynx in his hand like an apple.

Brent says to Bob, “Did you see that move, Dad?”

“Good work.”

“I’m already on level five.”

“Keep it up.”

“Benny and Tommy can’t get past level two.”

“You’re a natural.”

“Tommy’s cat has worms.”

“That’s no fun.”

“Let’s get bloody!” Brent says, smiling at Bob, his avatar still choking down the larynx.

Coffen takes another swig of vodka. He’s turning his children into house cats: too helpless to fend for themselves outside the subdivision’s safe haven. They’re going to be easy targets, like him. Their futures are lined with oleanders and plocks.

He spoons out a single piece of macaroni and pops it in his mouth—still a bit crunchy.

Jane enters, dolled to the nines, walks over to a hallway mirror and fusses with her hair, working the wisps back into the elaborate pattern of braids. She has long worn her hair in a system of weaving braids that reminds Coffen of crisscrossing highways. It’s something he’s always loved about her—the way she’s kept this unique hairstyle into middle age, while other subdivision wives look increasingly homogenized.

“Are you sure he’s not too young to play that game?” Jane asks.

On-screen, Brent’s cannibal repeatedly bashes a citizen’s head onto the asphalt, then laps up the stream of synapse stew leaking from the opened skull.

“It’s nothing worse than what’s online.”

“Does that mean he should play it?”

Bob picks up his vodka and has another sip. “Are you having fun?” Coffen says to his son.

“Let’s get bloody!” Brent calls over.

“He’s enjoying himself,” Coffen says.

“He’s nine,” Jane says.

“It’s better we’re open with him about the real world, so he feels safe enough to ask us questions later about sex, puberty, drugs … ”

“Cannibalism,” she says.

“Exactly. Nothing is taboo in the Coffen residence.” Yet once this posit escapes Coffen’s lips, his face changes. Shoulders slump. He’s immediately saddened because not even his denial, a normally impenetrable fortress of rationalizations and white lies and blind spots, can offer asylum from the simple fact that almost everything is taboo in the Coffen residence these days.

Luckily, the conversation can’t continue because their daughter, Margot, three years older than Brent, comes into the room, scrolling on her iPad’s touch screen. Margot looks up and screams to Brent, “Don’t miss the teeth upgrade on the next level, or you’ll never be able to eat those Navy SEALs.”

“I know that,” he says.

“You always miss it.”

“I do not.”

“Margot, can you help me with something?” Coffen asks his daughter, watching her fingers work the iPad.

“I’m hanging with a friend right now, Dad.”

Coffen looks around the room. “Who?”

“Ro.”

“Where is she?”

“You mean, ‘Where are we?’” She shakes her tablet at him, allowing Bob to make out a 3-D representation of the ocean on its screen, two avatars in wet suits, kicking their
finned feet. “And the answer is scuba diving at the Great Barrier Reef.”

“Why don’t you invite her over for real?” Coffen says.

“The Barrier Reef is so much cooler than being here for real,” she says.

While Jane continues to manipulate her maze of hair and Margot studies her underwater trek and sort of watches Brent’s cannibal feast on a minister, Coffen pulls the pot of macaroni off the heat without tasting it again, dumps it in a colander. Then he pours it back into the pot and stirs in the orangey-cheese powder and milk for the kids’ dinner. He slops it into two bowls and stands there drinking vodka.

His mother-in-law, Erma, waddles in. She’s five feet and one inch of diabetic rage and immediately belts out, “What’s Brent doing?”

Brent is straddling the minister and eating fistfuls of intestines.

“Well, what’s he doing?” Erma asks.

Coffen and his mother-in-law aren’t exactly bosom chums. There’s never been any kind of confrontation or anything because Bob kowtows to her. He tries to communicate with her in simple and direct ways, like this: “He’s gaming.”

“That game is gross,” says Erma, then specifically to Brent, “Turn that off while G-Ma’s here.”

“Mom, please,” Jane says.

“But I’ve almost beat my all-time high score!” Brent says.

“Fine,” Erma says, “beat your all-time high score. Ignore your G-Ma. Pretend your G-Ma’s not nearing the end of her life.”

“Mom,” Jane says.

“What? I won’t be around forever. They should appreciate me while I’m still alive.”

Brent’s avatar is up and off the minister, slowly cornering an Amish-looking woman.

Then there’s a tooting car horn out front.

“Schumann’s here,” Coffen says.

“Schumann?”

“Our chauffeur,” Coffen says with a huge smile. “We worked out an agreement for what happened the other night.”

The horn toots once more.

“This is weird,” Jane says.

“Dad, I thought you hated Schumann,” says Margot. “I heard you say he’s a douche.”

“What’s a douche?” Brent asks, outfoxing the Amish lass and now gnawing her thigh to the bone.

Coffen ignores this and asks Jane, “Shall we go, dear?”

She rolls her eyes, goes to get her coat, pats the many braids on her head so as to verify proper geometry. “I guess we shall,” she says.

“Might I say,” Schumann says to Jane, talking with a French accent, “that your sexuality is palpable this evening. If Bob wasn’t here, I’d make my play to pleasure you.”

He’s been laying it on absurdly thick since picking the Coffens up. Talking with that canned French accent, bowing when he opened the car door for Jane, making a big show of it. He’s even dressed like a stereotypical chauffeur—black suit, black hat.

Every TV show or movie Coffen has ever seen in which
there are servants, these people know how to keep their traps shut, don’t speak unless spoken to, be seen and not heard, etc. So where in his right mind does Schumann think he should be spouting off sexually explicit plans? Bob may not be any kind of chauffeur expert, but come on, this seems like Servitude 101: The help should keep focused on the task at hand.

“Um, thanks,” she says.

Both Coffens sit in the SUV’s backseat. Bob tries to catch Schumann’s eye in the rearview mirror to give him a face that means
Are you seriously being serious right now—palpable sexuality? You’re supposed to be a submissive role player, Schumann. Tonight, I’m the quarterback.

“I don’t know about you two,” Schumann says, “but my wife and I love a romantic glass of champagne in the park. It’s a perfect night for it. I brought a couple champagne flutes and a bottle in case you two were in the mood.”

“That does sound nice,” Jane says, “but I shouldn’t drink any alcohol. I’m going for the treading-water record again on Monday.”

But before Coffen can muscle a word in, there’s Schumann yammering, “It doesn’t sound nice, Jane. It
is
nice. A few sips won’t kill you. Coach used to let us have a few beers when we were in training to blow off steam.”

She laughs. Is she flirting with him?

“She was talking to me,” says Coffen.

“My bad,” he says.

“Let’s go for it,” she says. “Just a few sips.”

“That a girl,” says Schumann.

There are certain things that the blue-ribbon douche might have mastered. And romantic drinks in the park are one, because honestly, this is an idea that never would have occurred to Coffen. Yet look at Jane now, reclining on a blanket in the grassy area as Schumann stands pouring both of them glasses of champagne.

It’s dusk. No other people in the small park, which is located inside the subdivision’s electric fence. The park is built between the two streets that fork to form the top half of the capital Y. Both Bob and Jane look around, though there’s not much to see. Playground far away. Grass and more grass. A couple barbecue pits. A concrete path wending through in great slaloms. There’s nothing in the way of distraction—no kids or bills or household maintenance or any other miscellaneous topics that keep Bob’s and Jane’s minds away from the distance between them. In a sick way, Coffen is happy Schumann is here, drawing so much attention to himself that Bob can bleed into the background a bit, not fixate on the fact he feels uncomfortable.

“Will you be requiring anything else, Monsieur and Madame?” Schumann asks, still showing off with his French accent. He has an oversized backpack slung over one shoulder from which he had produced the champagne and requisite glasses.

“This is splendid,” Jane says and smiles. “Thanks for orchestrating all this.”

“For a woman of your beauty, this is nothing,” he says.

Leave it to Schumann to show Bob up even when he’s supposedly his chauffeur. Apparently, even chauffeuring has fine print that Coffen knows nothing about, a mysterious clause in which the driver gets to make the lord of the manor look like a neutered stooge. In the long run,
though, Coffen knows that if the smile on Jane’s face is any indication, this evening is going really well. Looking like a neutered stooge never felt better.

“And for the cherry on top,” says Schumann, futzing with his backpack and ripping out his bagpipes. “Ta-da!”

“Wow,” says Jane.

Coffen can’t tell whether his wife is being sincere. Bagpipes in the park seems like the kind of thing she would normally mock, but all evidence points to the contrary.

“I’d like to play one of my favorite songs to set the mood,” he says.

The last thing on earth Bob wants to hear is Schumann bagpiping a romantic song to set the mood—he’s already stealing the spotlight from Bob—yet Coffen knows not to show his true feelings because it’s obvious how much Jane wants to hear Schumann perform.

“This song is an oldie but a goody,” Schumann says. “I think it accurately captures the sensuous essence of the occasion.” He winks at Jane, then looks at Coffen with this face that’s saying,
Ahoy, amigo, not sure if you’re totally noticing what’s going down right now but I’m still 100 percent cooler and better than you, so suck it!

He shuts his eyes and puffs into the bagpipes’ mouthpiece, getting the big squawks going.

Recapture the magic

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