How ironic, thought
Thorogood, the economy's collapse coming forty days and forty nights
after the Internet crashed. A quiet agnostic, he guessed this
coincidence likely nothing more than that, although he kept the
thought to himself. Were he able to Tweet Jane, she would have
appreciated the coincidence as well. She might in fact have
thought it herself, as the Collapse coincided to the day, so far as
most anyone could know, two-score days following the abrupt
termination of all digital communication on the planet, so far as
most anyone could know.
Now, alone on the road,
Thorogood struggled to marshal his warring emotions, foremost among
them a mood of dread, a faceless stubborn swell of various dire
possibilities that periodically pushed up from his intestines and
through his chest into his head, occasionally with no apparent
invitation from slack or reactive reasoning. Vying with these surges
of black mood to compromise a reliable grip on the fragile optimism
he believed kept him going was his grief and anger over the loss of
his son and daughter to this apocalyptic turn of events. His teenage
son, Jethro, as with most of his generation, had been unable for the
first several days to disabuse himself of hope his smart phone would
somehow return to life. By the thousands youngsters swarmed into the
streets shuffling aimlessly, many mumbling to themselves, heads bowed
as their eyes stared fixedly at the plastic devices in their hands.
Some used both hands – one holding the device while a couple of
fingers of the other tapped desperately on the tiny blank screens.
Jethro was one of these.
“He's trying to text,”
his sister, Esther, told her father. “I tried at first, too. I
thought maybe it was just the screen, you know? The light or
whatever? I finally gave up.”
His daughter's apparent
practical sense amused Thorogood at first. Later, as he reflected on
his children's different personalities, he no longer felt certain her
response was as good a sign as it had seemed . Esther had always been
the quicker study, Jethro more deliberate and analytical. While it
usually took Jethro longer to understand something, his understanding
tended toward the more substantive. He was the ant lugging food back
to the colony, his sister a bee flitting among flowers.
“You still have yours?
This could just be temporary, you know.”
She held up a hand,
clutching her phone. “Think so, Dad?”
“I hope, Sweetheart.”
Jethro disappeared three
days after the Crash. He, Esther and Thorogood were walking from
Thorogood's apartment to Rodney's Auto Repair in the hope Thorogood's
pickup truck would be ready. It was in the shop getting a ring job
the day of the Crash when Thorogood's ex had dropped them off for
their court-ordered weekend visit. The Crash happened precisely as
their mother drove away in her mocha tan Toyota van
“What the fuck?”
Jethro's adolescent voice shifted with an awkward break from
exaggerated bass to tenor between the “the” and the “fuck”.
Simultaneously with the “fuck”, the boy, squinting in
exasperation, tore his eyes from his phone to shoot his father a
fleeting glance.
“Jethro!” Thorogood
shot back.
“Dad, all I can get is
404!” squeaked Esther, staring incredulously at her phone.
The siblings, fingers
frantically tapping on their phones, followed Thorogood into his
apartment without another spoken word from any of them.
Jethro vanished without
a trace, no warning, simply swallowed into the oblivious
shuffling herd. He lagged further and further behind his father and
sister until he was gone.
“Jethro?” Thorogood
said, raising his voice and craning his neck when the boy had failed
to acknowledge a question he ordinarily would have reacted to with
passion: “Wanna stop at Mickey D's?”
“Jethro!!” Thorogood
and his daughter shouted repeatedly to no response as they stood like
stumps in a bewitched river coursing in two directions. When Jethro
didn't catch up with them after a spell, they retraced their steps,
calling his name, until they were back at Thorogood's apartment. No
Jethro.
They sat on the stoop for
much of an hour studying the trudging parade. Occasionally Thorogood
or Esther would call his name if one of the trudgers seemed to
resemble Jethro. This required a concert of conditioned reflex and
perhaps instinct along with a heightened sensitivity to nuances of
physical type, carriage and motion. Neither could remember precisely
what Jethro was wearing, which made scrutiny the more difficult in
that virtually everyone wore similar clothes and presented identical
head tilts toward the devices they held in front of them.
“Zombie apocalypse,”
Thorogood muttered.
“What's that, Daddy? I
mean, I know what zombies are but what's an acopalips or whatever?”
“It's from the bible,
Sweetie. I guess it sorta means the end of the world. But I was just
kidding. Maybe this is a movie they're making, and all these people
are playing zombies, ya think?”
“Yeah, they do kinda
look like zombies, don't they! But my phone doesn't work, either. Ya
think we're in the movie too?”
“Maybe, Sweetie. Maybe
we are.” His voice was going distant, and Esther picked up on it.
“You don't really think
so, do you.”
Thorogood pulled her to
him and gave her a one-armed hug. He tried to put more enthusiasm
into his voice. “If we are, they'll hafta pay us, won't they? Maybe
enough so we can go to Disney World, huh?” His effort failed.
“Dad, this isn't a
movie. Something's wrong, isn't it.” It was a statement, delivered
in a normally lilting soprano voice gone flat.
She spoke again before her
father could think of a response.
“So I wonder why
everybody's walking? I mean...oh, I know! They're trying to find a
signal. You know, like the ad, Can you hear me now?” She pulled
away from him, stood and started toward the passing crowd. Thorogood
grabbed her arm.
“No, Sweetie! I'm not
losing you, too.” He knew the instant he spoke he'd gone too far,
that he should have said losing track of in reference to his
son. The slip, which sprang from a heart losing hope by the second,
left no wiggle room for Esther.
She returned, dejected, to
the stoop. Thorogood saw tears welling in her eyes. He draped an arm
across her shoulders and patted her arm. Neither spoke until she'd
regained control. She wondered aloud when she'd be able to go home.
“You're with me, Esther.
This is your home, too.”
“I'm worried about
Mommy.”
“Well, her car's OK so
maybe she'll come by and pick you up. In fact, maybe that's where
Jethro is. Your mother saw him and he's with her.”
“There aren't any cars,
Dad. Everybody's walking in the street. Cars can't get through. If we
walked back that way maybe there wouldn't be so many people, and she
would see us.”
Although surprised and
appreciative of his daughter's reasoning, Thorogood did not share her
optimism. Fearing the phone-staring pedestrian clog extended much
further back than he wanted to believe, he vetoed the idea of leaving
the apartment building site.
“She might not see us
out there with the rest of them. If she does get through and we're
not here...”
Esther sighed and crumpled
in resignation. She started staring at her pink-encased phone again,
and even tapped its screen a couple of times, listlessly.
It was growing dark, and
the shuffling horde had thinned some when Thorogood and his daughter
stood and started for the front door. It was Esther who recognized
the motor scooter's put-put-put as it worked its way up the
street.
“Roger! It's Roger!”
Indeed it was. The man now
living with Thorogood's ex. Thorogood felt a pang of gratitude that
Esther referred to the man by name rather than calling him Dad. Pain
replaced the gratitude while his daughter waved from the rump seat as
she put-putted away through the oblivious mass of phone
addicts. Thorogood trudged into his apartment, grabbed a beer from
the fridge and collapsed onto the sofa to watch the TV, which
apparently had been on all day.
The TV served as his
window on the accelerating decomposition of the world outside his
apartment. His screen – all TV screens ultimately – went white
when much of the digital technology that supported the Internet and
network and local televising, having become interdependent on each
other, could no longer sustain itself without its Internet component.
This death started at the pyramid apex and percolated down until all
that remained were local stations offering local personalities and
questionable experts whose only substantive contribution to the
collective consciousness was the incrementally escalating hysteria in
the tone of their words and, eventually, their very voices. Thorogood
happened to be awake and watching when WACK-TV news anchor Jay
Teeterbaum-Pinckney's ordinarily sonorous baritone caved into a
bullfrog croak as he tried to say, “This just in...” An unearthly
electronic squeal interrupted the venerable Teeterbaum-Pinckney while
a series of brilliant multi-colored flashes obliterated his tanned,
smartly coiffed visage, leaving nothing on the screen but hissing
snow.
The power grid took even
that away when it eventually went down.
It was the quiet that woke
Thorogood from a deep, though tortured sleep. With no electricity
feeding the building everything that lived off the juice shut down,
taking with it the subtle chorus of hums, whines and throbbing so
familiar to the building's inhabitants it was unnoticeable. Until
it was gone, leaving in its wake an alien silence. It took him nearly
a minute to understand what was wrong, and it was the absence of the
nearest sound, the timid grating of the gears of his electric bedside
clock, that brought him fully around. Knowing it was finally time to
hit the road and that he would never again enjoy the familiar comfort
of his bed, he rolled back onto his favorite side and snuggled deeper
under the covers, thinking to allow himself one last indulgence for
the hell of it. Then hell intruded as he realized the heat pump too
was dead, removing the poorly insulated building's primary defense
against the bitter January cold snap. Best get dressed before the
snap came stomping into his bedroom.
The cold, he figured,
would give him time to get out of the city and the roving bands of
thugs that had devolved from the shuffling phone watchers of the
early days. Their descent to the primitive began when their
perspective switched from stubborn disbelief to the impotent rage of
the betrayed. Striding now in clusters, heads no longer bent nor eyes
fixed on blank screens, they clutched their phones in fists
reminiscent of Mao's Red Guards wielding their little red books.
“Fuuuck! 'snot
faaaaaaaair!” Their pre-battle cry.
Next they morphed into
marauding bands, still clutching the phones but no longer bothering
to distinguish nuances of social justice. With the unanimity of a
frenzied cloud of starlings, these teens settled on financial
branches as the target of their discontent. Bricks and garden rocks
the weapons of choice. The banks had begun locking their doors and
shutting down ATMs to thwart a run on their liquid assets.
Then came the ban on sales
of gasoline. Police and National Guard units assumed its enforcement
in part to deprive the teen thugs of firebomb fuel for their next
weapon of choice but mainly to preserve the precious liquid for their
own use, as martial law was asserting itself across the land with or
without official sanction.
Thorogood shifted his
backpack to better distribute the weight, which seemed to have
increased now that he'd reached the city's edge and was trudging past
a stretch of darkened commercial buildings. Were it not for these
ghostly images and the paved road, it occurred to him, he and the
others might have been traversing the moon's dark side.
He hadn't expected so many
others to be out this soon. All were, as he, bundled against the
bitter cold, wearing backpacks and slogging along the highway. No one
spoke to anyone else, not even those who seemed to be traveling
together. Noticing what appeared to be a phone clutched in the gloved
hand of a spectral form as it passed him, he squeezed the small
mirror he'd grabbed from his shaving kit while packing it, silently
congratulating himself on his foresight. Its presence in his hand,
he'd figured, could protect him from a glancing impression he was an
old fart and thus prey, as civilization unraveled around him.
He wondered where the
others were headed, if any were also hoping to get to Georgia. He
wondered why he was acting on the preposterous impulse to try to find
Jane, if, in fact, Jane was her name. Or his, possibly. An
Internet crush, but clearly one of the mind, as he had no clue to
Jane's appearance. She–he resolved to think of Jane as female–had
posted various images as avatars. Some of them were of a woman, but others
were of flowers or other creatures. One was a bear cub. She presented
herself as a woman, but Thorogood knew of pranksters who portrayed
anything but themselves. For all he knew Jane could be an obese male
cannibal who lured unsuspecting Internet “friends” to his home
for fun and nourishment.
Even if Jane was real
Thorogood doubted he could rely on his intuition regarding women,
unless his judgment had matured some since the disastrous marriage
that produced Jethro and Esther. He'd learned some things being a
father. He knew how parents talked. Jane claimed to have two young
children. She claimed to be a widow and that she and the kids lived
on a small farm near Athens. He and she were compatible online. What
the hell, he'd said aloud, when he decided his heading would be
south.
“Oh, yeah,” he
whispered now as he watched dawn peek peach along the horizon. Not
much left to lose.
All I can say is WOW.
ReplyDeleteThanks, Brigid. Your appreciation means a lot to me.
ReplyDeleteThis is the best thing you've ever written. I just wish it was satire.
ReplyDeleteThat's kind, Margaret. I agree it's way too close for comfort. I tried to leaven the Cormac McCarthy with a little Mel Brooks, but I'm afraid the Brooks is more like whistling past a cemetery at midnight.
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