The Book of Rabbit
Chapter 1
“I will remember what I was, I am sick of rope and chains -
I will remember my old strength and all my forest affairs.
I will not sell my back to man for a bundle of sugar cane;
I will go out to my own kind, and the wood-folk in their lairs.
I will go out until the day, until the morning break -
Out to the wind's untainted kiss, the water's clean caress;
I will forget my ankle-ring and snap my picket stake.
I will revisit my lost love and playmates masterless!”
― Rudyard Kipling, The Jungle Books
I will remember my old strength and all my forest affairs.
I will not sell my back to man for a bundle of sugar cane;
I will go out to my own kind, and the wood-folk in their lairs.
I will go out until the day, until the morning break -
Out to the wind's untainted kiss, the water's clean caress;
I will forget my ankle-ring and snap my picket stake.
I will revisit my lost love and playmates masterless!”
― Rudyard Kipling, The Jungle Books
Sit back
little cubs and listen to my story. Who I am and how I fit into it all isn’t as
important as what you can learn if you keep your little hungry mouths shut and
your ears open. This is important because the world out there is a damn jungle,
and you’ll need to learn everything you can if you plan on making out of here
alive.
Years
ago, in this here city, there was a little cat named Rabbit, and boy was he a
spunky little kid that thought the world couldn’t beat him. Much like the rest
of us, he was poor as dirt with his stolen tennis shoes, daddy’s old cowboy
hat, and a big ol’ smile on his face when there wasn’t a cigarette hanging from
between his lips. You see, Rabbit wasn’t afraid of anyone, because he knew he
was faster than anyone else around, and had the biggest pair on him in the
South.
Rabbit
hung around one of the little wolf cubs named Phao. He’s not really important
to this story, mostly because he’s a little snot, but he’s one of Rakasha’s
kids, and that is one scary woman. If you don’t believe me, try to mess with
one of her cubs, or take something that’s hers, because it won’t be pretty.
Phao knew it to though, so much like Rabbit, he walked with a lot more
confidence in his step than he should have had.
These
two little brats were usually doing runs, delivering packages, or collecting
money, most of the time they when they should have been in school. When there
wasn’t anything for them to do they just wandered around and caused trouble,
but they liked to go talk to Father Panther. That crazy fool was a vet from the
war. The bad one; where he got those scars and the tattoo of the panther across
most of his face. He always started each story with that same predatory smile
that showed off his one gold fang.
“So you
want to know about the flames, eh little Rabbit?” He’d ask the kids as they sat
down on the concrete steps in front of his overgrown yard and dilapidated home.
“You want to know what it would be like to be cooked,” he asked with an almost
cruel laugh. “They don’t feel it for long, because the body can’t feel the pain
anymore, but the brain,” he said with a dramatic pause. “Oh, it still knows,
and keeps on telling them to run, run like rats!”
Rabbit
and Phao liked these stories. The tales were always about war and death, or
sometimes women and drugs if Panther had been hitting the bottle, as he was
prone to do. He didn’t mind telling the stories to the cubs, gave Panther
someone to talk to, and he saw something in Rabbit that he liked, something
most couldn’t. Rabbit was ambitious, but he was willing to work for it.
“That’s
why I prefer my knife,” Panther said, sliding the long black blade free of his
belt, letting it shine against his almost yellow eye. “I like to get up close,
make sure the job is done.” There was that grin again. Panther was old, true,
but he was far from harmless, no matter what Rakasha said. “Guns jam, misfire,
or clog, but as long as I have my claws,” he replaced the black knife next to
its brother. “I shall not be left wanting.”
Rabbit
was smiling as he watched Panther, listening to the end of another great story.
Phao, however, had gorged himself earlier that day and had begun to yawn with
his mouth gaped wide.
“Yo, I
got to get going,” Phao said.
Rabbit
stood up to leave with his friend, nodding as he put a cigarette in his mouth. Old
Panther’s hand snatched up quick though, grabbing the forearm of the young boy.
Rabbit looked down at the old hunched over cat.
“Hey,”
he said, getting Rabbit’s attention. “What we talked about last week: those
Nags leaving you be? They lay off?”
“Yeah,
Panther,” Rabbit reassured, uneasily, “I told you I had it covered. I talked to
Rattler, everything is cool. No need to worry.”
Panther
eyed the young one for a moment, considering his answer.
“Don’t
get involved with those snakes,” he almost spit with the last word. “Don’t do
any kind of business with them. You’re better than that.”
“I know,
old man. I’ve got it. Don’t worry.” Rabbit pulled his wrist back and
straightened his hat one more time.
Phao was
already a few steps away. Rabbit waved goodbye to Panther before he went to
catch up. The two walked in silence for a few minutes, up to the crosswalk at
the red light, before Phao shook his head.
“You
should have just told him, man. You know old dude is going to find out.” Phao
bit his lip, shaking his head again. “Panther knows too many people, sees too
much perched up on those steps of his all damn day.”
“Shit, I
don’t know why I didn’t.” But Rabbit did know. “I guess I just didn’t want to
disappoint him or something, that’s all. He and my pops used to be real close.”
Rabbit sighed as they walked. “But I can’t stay working for your momma. The
money is too good with the Nags.”
“I
know.”
“Maybe
if I told her, said I wanted to stay but needed more incentive.”
“Nope,”
Phao said flatly. “She’ll tell you she pays so little because she keeps you
safe, that you are under her protection. Then she’ll say some bull about her
guidance and how she’s survived out here…man, I’ve heard it too many times.”
“You
need to get out from under her paw too then,” Rabbit said as he paused to light
the hand-rolled cigarette in between his lips.
“That’s
easy for you to say, you aren’t one of hers.”
That
ended the conversation for that day, but now Rabbit’s mind was on Rattler and
what he had promised. The boys had taken a pit stop, going by Baloo’s, a little
gas station near their neighborhood. They crossed over the cracked pavement of
the parking lot, glancing at the bum with the long dreadlocks who was always
outside of the store, before heading in. The bell above the door rang out and
Brother Bear gave a deep and hearty hello.
“Hey
there boys,” he exclaimed, coming down one of the center isles. “Want your
usual?”
“That’s
fine,” Phao said, slipping a candy bar off of the shelf when Bear turned away.
Brother
Bear was a brute of a man, tall, thick, and tanned a dark brown, whose family
had come here for a better life. His accent was barely present anymore, and his
pleasant disposition had become almost permanent ever since opening up the
small gas station. It was his little slice of life. It and his family were the
necessities, and he was constantly trying to tell the boys that as he sold them
the sodas in the glass bottles.
“Here
you go boys. That’ll be $3.50.”
Rabbit
looked confused at the price. Brother Bear pointed at Phao’s.
“That’s
cold, Bear,” Phao retorted.
“Even if
I’m wrong,” Bear held up a finger, “which I am not, you still owe me for a few
others that I didn’t nail your ass down for, so cough it up.”
The two
boys pulled what they had in their pockets, but Phao ended up putting the candy
bar back.
“If you
two had some honest work, this wouldn’t be a problem.”
“Yeah,
yeah,” Phao said, heading for the door.
“Later,
Bear.”
Bear
nodded to Rabbit, watching the two as they left. He came out a moment later,
after putting the money in the drawer. Bear’s eyes were still locked on the two
boys as they crossed the street. The two kids made it to the end of the street
before they touched fists and went separate directions. The old bum drank
whatever the container held in the brown paper bag as he watched Bear, watching
the two boys.
“Why you
waste your time on them? They ain’t nothing but criminals in training.”
Bear
shook his head before turning to the old bum to respond.
“That’s
rich coming from you,” Bearn sneered. “The boys have potential. They just need
some guidance, better than what they have.” He scratched his thick hair
absently. “All they have to do is make it out of here.”
The bum
with the multi-colored dreadlocks let out a laugh that turned into a cough, one
hand holding his side. Bear turned to the man fully now, a more serious
expression than his usual manner as he waited for an explanation.
“That
wolf cub has no chance, and Rabbit,” he said with a cough. “Rabbit gone be
lucky if he don’t wind up on the wrong end the gun.”
“It’s
closing time. Why don’t you get out of here,” Bear said night began to claim
the sky.
“Right,”
the bum smiled. “See you tomorrow, Bear.”
As Bear
closed up his place, Rabbit on his way home, humming a tune to himself as he
looked down at his fancy new sneakers. He finished up the last cigarette for
the day, giving his shirt a sniff to make sure the odor wasn’t on him too much.
If his mother had anything to say, he could blame it on being around Father
Panther. Rabbit had learned how to deal with his mother, a task that was much
easier than dealing with his father. Now that he was dead though, Rabbit was
the man of the house.
Rabbit
stepped in the door like he did every night, tossing his hat up on the end of
the banister and stopping in the living room to stretch and scratch his balls. Someone
had left the television on a cooking show where Jackal was discussing the
importance of slow cooking venison. His mother must have left it on. There was
a smell coming from the kitchen that had caught his attention, a sweet aroma that
he wasn’t used to.
A pan
sizzled on top of the stove. It contained meat and green peppers with what
looked like small chunks of onion. Next to it were some other bits of food on a
cutting, but Rabbits eyes had focused in on the large chunks of potatoes.
Rabbit loved potatoes. He reached forward, his hand scooping up four pieces
with a smile. As he brought the delicious food to his mouth though, a hand came
hard across his face with a popping sound that echoed as he was slapped.
“Ow!”
Rabbit cried. “What the fuck, Bunny!” He dropped the food back onto the
counter.
Rabbit’s
sister, Bunny, stood in front of him now with her arms crossed at the top of
her exposed midriff. Her pink and purple hair hung down in front of an angry
set of eyes. Eyes that Rabbit swore looked red in that light.
“What
the hell did you do that for,” Rabbit asked again, rephrasing his question.
“Oh, I’m
sorry. Were you the one here all day helping momma, or were you the snot-nosed
little brother out dealing that couldn’t even bother to pick up his phone? I
only ask, because you look like the little piece of shit-“
“Hold on
now, Bunny,” Rabbit interrupted. “Mom didn’t say she needed me.”
“It’s
the first of the month, fool. She needed her medicine, and help at the church.
You know better.”
Bunny
shook her head and went back to the food, checking on it. Rabbit realized he
had made a mistake, but the truth was that he had simply forgotten. He paused
for a moment and then tried to switch the subject.
“What is
that? It smells good.” He asked his sister before moving a bit closer, still
enjoying the smell. “It looks like-“
“It
ain’t for you,” Bunny said flatly. “This is for me and momma. I bought the food
with my money that I worked for. You can have cereal.”
She pushed past Rabbit to grab the
salt, ignoring his hurt expression as she continued to season the food.
“Guess you’re just jealous we don’t
all have to make money on our backs,” Rabbit shot back.
It took Bunny a second for it to
process, but when it did she lunged at him. Rabbit was too quick though. He had
already grabbed the box of cereal and shot out of the living room. She heard
him padding upstairs, her teeth clenched and a fist balled tight. She would get
him later.
Rabbit had already bounced into his
room and locked the door. His hand flipped the controls on the stereo, bringing
it to life with blue buttons and an orange display screen, blasting out the
raps about the realist killers as he flipped on the lamp by his desk. Crashing
down on the bed, it took a simple fluid motion to reach underneath and bring up
the old shoe box where the good stuff was. Rabbit pulled out one of his
expertly rolled joints and lit it up as the music played.
The boy lay in the near-darkness
for a while, puffing out the smoke and thinking about the future. He was
thinking about tomorrow, what he had talked about with Rattler, and his mind
wandered over to Fox and those short shorts she wore. There was a lot to think
about, but Rabbit spent most of his time thinking on what he would do when he
finally had enough money to quit school, to move out of his mom’s house, to get
out of the city. That was the plan, by any means necessary.
There was a knock on his door, one
Rabbit barely heard over the stereo. His mother pushed the door open with a
frail hand before stepping in, glancing around his room. She paused when she
saw the joint hanging out of his mouth.
“Hey, mom.”
Rabbit reached for the remote,
muting the stereo. He knew she would want to talk.
“Could you at least try and hide
the drugs from me?”
Rabbit smirked and placed the
burning joint on the edge of the ashtray that was on top of the stacked up
magazines next to his bed. His mother, Hare, stepped further into the room and
glanced at his walls, squinting in the dim light.
“Why did you take all of your
drawings down, Rabbit?”
Rabbit shrugged. He almost absently
reached for the joint again, but stopped himself.
“No point. Teacher says I’m good,
but not good enough.”
She frowned. “So, get
better—practice.”
“Come on, mom. That isn’t for me.”
Hare approached the bed finally,
placing a hand on her son’s shoulder.
“Then what is for you?”
“I’m going to think of something.”
She knelt next to the bed on one
knee.
“Rabbit,” she said weakly gripping
his shoulder. “You’re too smart for this. You have a future out there if you do
well in school, if you show up. You need to get out of here and go to college.”
“Education ain’t nothing but a
scheme mom. It’s just another system designed to keep folks going back to it.
It’s just like the food stamps we’re stuck on.” Rabbit sat up. His mother was
already moving to stand back up herself though. “Come on, mom. I’ve got plans.”
Hare moved back towards the door,
but turned back to look at her son.
“I’ve got to get to work. They
probably need me to sew up a few people tonight who had plans like yours.”
“It’s not like that,” Rabbit
protested loudly. “Between you and Old Panther, all I hear about is how bad
that shit is.”
“I left you some of my food in the
fridge,” she said, done arguing. “I am headed to work, and Bunny is already
gone to do the same. You have the house to yourself, maybe you’ll find some
time to study.”
Rabbit didn’t respond.
“Keep the door locked. I’ll be back
around dawn.”
She shut his door. The music was
quickly turned back on, and up. Rabbit stood up and pulled his white t-shirt up
over his head, tossing it to the floor. He picked the joint back up between two
fingers and knocked off the ash before taking a long puff on it again. Stepping
into his small bathroom, Rabbit cut the light on, it flickered to life, showing
his reflection in the mirror. Exhaling a long stream of smoke he admired
himself for a moment in the mirror, thinking about Fox again. He held up and
arm, flexing it, letting his free index finger trace a muscle. He ran the same
finger across the scar on his shoulder afterwards, a long three inch cut from a
bike accident when he was younger. Rabbit thought it worked for him. He liked
the way that he looked. There was a smile into the mirror before the light
turned off. The only light that could be seen was the dim cherry at the end of
his joint.
Chapter 2
“Basically, I believe the world is a jungle,
and if it is not a bit of a jungle in the home, a child cannot possibly be fit
to enter the outside world.” –Bette Davis
Now, let’s
talk about my girl Fox for a minute.
Fox cursed, realizing the she had
broken another nail. She pushed the thought aside, determined to fix it later,
after school. Right now, that ol’ girl was trying to figure out a good excuse
for why she didn’t have her chemistry homework. She had been thinking about it
while searching for the book in her locker, but that was when she had noticed
the broken nail. Now her whole process was messed up.
There it
was, stuffed into the back underneath her jacket. Fox grabbed the chemistry
book and slid it under her arm. She closed the locker, knowing she was going to
be late. This had been a trend for her lately, and it needed to end. She had
too much to do though, and it was all starting to come crushing down on her. That’s
what happens when you keep secrets though.
She came
up with a story about her sick aunt. Teachers buy those types of stories a lot
more from the students who usually have good grades. She tried her best to pay
attention in class that day, but learning can be pretty boring when everything
else you do feels more important. Her entire day hinged on lunch period. It was
where she could get what she needed, make her contacts, and catch up on the
right types of gossip. Fox didn’t have anyone at the school that she considered
a close friend by any means, but she had made a lot of acquaintances. It helped
to be a wallflower, to fit in with almost anyone. The issue with that of course
is when someone can fit in with anyone; it is easy to lose sight of who they
really are.
Fox
moved through the courtyard as the students ate, played, and conversed. She
made her usual rounds, talking to some of the girls, couple of the football
players, and Skunk was always good for information, but the real work came with
the Bandar and Nags. They were the two biggest gangs in the area. Drugs came
from a lot of places in this city, but the Nags were the biggest movers and
pushers around, and the Bandar had almost cornered the markets on guns and tail
as well. The saying still goes around these parts: if someone is looking for
something illegal, they’re going to go through a snake or a monkey to get it.
They
were not hard to pick out of a crowd. The Nags all were dark green and black
with either silver or yellow chains or other jewelry to show off their status
within the gang. A dark yellow eye with a slit of black could be seen on most
of them, showing off that they had killed for the gang. The snakes prided
themselves on their cars, most of which were tricked out or done up with art by
other gang members. The Bandar on the other hand stuck out through association.
Whenever they could be, they were always together. There colors were mostly
black and brown, with no real indicators of rank or importance, though everyone
knew Louie was most certainly king. Unlike the snakes though, the gang of
monkeys considered women to be more like property or trophies. I know you pups
have seen them, walking around on leashes or with those diamond studded
chokers.
It was true, everyone knew who belonged to
which gang, but the real challenge for Fox was trying to get them to talk
without tipping her hand. Recently though, Fox thought she had found a way
in—Rabbit. She was proud of how subtle she had been, how well it was working. When
she saw him with Phao at the old orange picnic table the cadence of her steps
changed, and whether she realized it or not Fox’s hips had a tad bit more of a
sway to them, accented by her shorts and long legs.
“Hey there, Rabbit.”
Phao looked up and bit his lip. Fox
nodded to him and he gave an odd hand gesture to acknowledge her presence as
pleasantly as he could. Rabbit had been focused on the story that he was
telling, but that focus was easily replaced onto Fox.
“What’s up there, Foxy?”
She smiled at his flirty greeting,
but there was something Fox didn’t like about the guys like Rabbit. It was the
abundance of confidence. She was pretty sure Rabbit was nervous talking to her,
but he did everything in his power not to let that shine through. There was a
conflict for her of course, showing interest to get she wanted, how did she
expect him to react? It had to be done though, and Fox felt she was handling it
as best as she could. She sat on the bench across from them, but Rabbit stood
up and moved to sit next to her. She smiled and leaned back, the blank tank top
showing off her curves.
Phao stood up and looked away from
the two for a moment.
“You know, I’m gonna go see if I
can score some food.”
“Yeah man,” Rabbit said, his eyes
never leaving Fox. “I’ll catch up with you later.”
Fox actually gave Phao a quick
glance before he turned to leave. She wasn’t sure what to make of the wolf, but
he wasn’t what she needed. She turned back to Rabbit. Trying to ease some of
the tension, Fox gave him an odd smile.
“So what’s up?”
“Shit, you know,” Rabbit answered,
taking off his cowboy and placing it on the orange table. He wanted to be able
to lean in closer. “I was just waiting on you.”
Fox laughed. “No, I mean what have
you been doing?”
“Eh, nothing new, girl, just
chilling with Phao and putting some work in.”
“Oh yeah? Where did you say you
worked again?”
“I do a little bit of everything.”
Rabbit smiled and reached an arm around Fox’s shoulders. She gave him no signs
of wanting to recoil, even if her mind disagreed. “I do whatever it takes to
make my money, but I can’t work for just anyone. I have standards.”
“Oh?”
“That’s right. And one day, I’ll be
my own boss and handle business my way.”
“Okay. So what is it you want to
do?”
“You know, have my own company.”
Rabbit realized that didn’t answer her question. “I’ll make my money and then
do investments, land development and real estate, entrepreneurship type stuff.”
“But you have to make that money
first.”
“Yeah, that’s right.” Rabbit let
his other hand brush up against her knee slightly.
This time, Fox did move away,
hidden in a fluid motion as she turned to face him. She was trying to get
across a more serious tone.
“That’s the problem I’m having.”
“Really? I thought your family was
loaded.”
Fox sighed. “It hasn’t been the
same since dad lost his job at the packing company.” The best lies are based in
the truth. “That and, my mom is really getting on my case about spending money,
but I need new clothes, new shoes.”
Rabbit nodded, leaning in still
just a bit more, trying to relax with her.
“I’m sure you can find something.”
“Right, nothing that pays what I
want, not with school,” Fox said, looking away a bit dramatically. “And hell if
I’ll end up working a pole.” She was trying to hit his buttons the right way.
Rabbit snickered. “Hey, my sister
makes a lot of money doing it, and you’re way prettier than her.”
“What!? Really,” Fox said, feigning
the surprise.
“Of course you are,” Rabbit said
with a smile. His hand came up to her face, caressing a cheek gently.
“No,” she popped him playfully on
the shoulder. “I mean I didn’t know Bunny was a stripper.”
Rabbit laughed. “What? You think
she was going to college? She sure as hell ain’t making that kind of money from
working at Cougars. Besides, they fired her.”
“Never say never I guess,” Fox said
after looking away from Rabbit.
“Nah, you aren’t the type.” Rabbit
placed a hand on the bottom of her chin and gently pulled her attention back to
him. “You just need you a man who can appreciate you, find your real talents.”
The line was as cheap as they come,
kids, but for some reason, Fox didn’t find herself laughing like she thought
she would. Instead, she had let Rabbit get in close, real close. He was about
to kiss her, and Fox was about to let him, but just as she could feel his
warmth, that was when the bell rang for fourth period.
Fox shot up so fast that she almost
clipped Rabbit.
“Shit, I have to go. You know how
much of a freak Badger can be if you’re late.”
“Uh, yeah,” was all Rabbit could
get out. He was cursing on the inside.
“What are you up to after school?”
“Got some errands to run, not much
other than that,” he said, standing. “Why, you want to hang out?”
“We’ll see,” Fox said with quite
the powerful smile. She gave a soft wave over her shoulder before heading back
into the building.
As soon as Rabbit was sure she was
inside, positive that she wouldn’t hear it, he kicked the old orange picnic
table as hard as he could. His foot was going to hurt for the rest of the day,
but Rabbit didn’t regret the kick, just what he thought might have been the
biggest missed opportunity of his life. He didn’t want to go to his math class
now, and fought the urge to go masturbate in the gym bathroom. Rabbit found
Phao and convinced him to skip class with him instead.
After school that day though, Fox
had hurried from her last class. She had somewhere to be, a different path to
take that day. Out the back door, away from the busses and student parking lots,
that was the way that led into the ghetto behind the school, the way Rabbit and
Phao took home every day. She came out the door in time to see them walking
down the hill. Rabbit’s hat wasn’t hard to spot, which allowed her to hang back
a bit, masked in all of the other students just in case one of them had looked
back. It was time to put some of her skills to the test, and to see if her lead
panned out like she thought it would.
Fox had been following them for
five blocks now successfully, but this was the easy part. She had been hanging
back with her hood pulled up, not wanting to be seen by the boys, or anyone
really. It wasn’t dark yet, so it was a little less suspicious for her to be
walking by herself, but one guy trying to holler at her and everything could go
south quick. She was trying to be smooth, even if this was her first time doing
anything like this. The only hiccup was when Rabbit had stopped to get
something out of his backpack. She was almost sure that Phao had stopped her,
but if he had, he must not have realized it was her.
Fox was focused now, which she was
thankful for. She had spent fifth and sixth period thinking about Rabbit, about
almost kissing him. It wasn’t that big of a deal, but something had nagged at
her about it. It was that first step that had caused her to ask: how far was
she willing to go? Fox already knew the answer though; knew before she started.
Rabbit and Phao had walked four
more blocks now in silence now. One would occasionally point at someone they
saw and the two would laugh or crack jokes for a moment. A block ago, Phao had
stopped to talk to a tall leggy blonde that Fox didn’t recognize. Other than
the fact that she seemed older, Fox couldn’t tell much about her, but made a
mental note to remember her. The stranger’s looks, the way she was dressed, the
tattoo on her neck, smelled like a tiger to Fox.
Whoever it was, her conversation
with Phao wasn’t long. Originally Fox had thought that the wolf was trying to
entice the leggy blonde, but now she wasn’t so sure. The boys had begun walking
again, but they weren’t quiet this time. The two were having a conversation
about something, a discussion that Fox wished she could hear. If she could have
gotten closer, she might have been able to read their lips. The risk wasn’t
worth it though. It didn’t quite look like they were arguing, but Phao didn’t
exactly look pleased either. It was just hard to tell without knowing the
context.
Fox’s prey finally stopped at the
next red light, sharing a couple more words before pounding their fists
together and laughing about something. The two had split up though, which in
her eyes would make this easier. Now she just had to worry about Rabbit
spotting her. The only thing Fox didn’t like was that the further they went
into his neighborhood, the more lost she felt. She knew a little, but it was
still all unfamiliar territory, which could prove to be a problem if a bad
situation came up.
Rabbit had passed by Baloo’s, but
he didn’t turn the way he should have to go home. This was a good sign for Fox.
This little after school activity may prove to have been worth it after all. Rabbit
was moving along briskly, humming a tune to himself as he rounded the corner.
Fox noticed that he was being a bit more careful it seemed, paying more
attention. He had looked over his shoulder twice now since splitting off from
Phao. It was smart really. Never know who could be watching. Especially in a
place like this where everyone was just a little bit nosey, because sometimes,
information was just as good as money. Also, this was the type of place where
everyone reported back to someone, all kinds of folks had feelers out there.
Fox observed as Rabbit went down
the hill in front of him. She stepped off to the side to avoid detection, from
Rabbit and the people that had come out to sit on their porch, or the one down
the street fixing his car. This almost caused her to lose sight of Rabbit
though. He wasn’t at the bottom of the hill like he should have been.
Fox shot out from behind the wall
she had been using to obfuscate herself with. She quickly made her way down the
hill, keeping her hood up and glancing around for him. Had it not been for that
cowboy hat, she would have missed Rabbit hopping along down a long alleyway
between two rows of houses. Fox had no clue where Rabbit was going, but now she
wanted to get closer for fear of losing him again. It was a short lived fear
though. Rabbit took a right past one of the older houses with the half torn
down back porch. He knocked a beer can off of the hood of an old rusting silver
truck that sat in front of some trees along the poorly kept dirt path he was
now following. Fox also noted the tire tracks in the dirt and flat grass.
Wherever Rabbit was going had seen several visitors recently.
Sure that Rabbit wouldn’t see her; Fox
finally made her way around the derelict vehicle and took a glance down the
long dirt path. Rabbit’s destination was clear now, the old Alpo plant. A small
rundown factory that had been there since the seventies, most of the residents
had forgotten it was there. Over the years everything had built up around it,
leaving the ruins of the past to vanish into the trees and other businesses. The
main entrance had actually been blocked by a piece of the roof that had fallen
off about ten years ago due to a tornado.
Rabbit wasn’t heading towards the
front though. He had gone to the side of the building, still humming his song. Fox
moved off of the dirt path and into the tall uncut grass. This was more her
style, able to stalk her prey unseen. Moving through nature’s camouflage, she
actually made it around the corner faster than Rabbit did. She could see the
cars now, all parked behind the loading dock, hidden away from prying eyes. The
tricked out cars meant that she had been right all along, this place was a den
of vipers.
Fox could see everything from her
current position. Rabbit had made his way around and taken his backpack off
before climbing up the raised platform of the dock. There was an open door on
that side. A shadowed figure stepped out of it in his black leather jacket and waved
Rabbit inside. This was a meeting Fox didn’t want to miss, but getting in
undetected would be complicated, and possibly past her abilities. She watched
the outside for a moment longer, realizing that she had to try. She had not
come this far to wait outside.
Chapter
3
About suffering they were never
wrong,
The old Masters: how well they understood
Its human position: how it takes place –W. H. Auden
The old Masters: how well they understood
Its human position: how it takes place –W. H. Auden
Rabbit had stepped into the Alpo
plant. It was a welcomed breeze in the old drafty building. Several of the
walls had been knocked down, windows were broken, and there was only one
working toilet, but that wasn’t what Rabbit was focused on. There were two
televisions, three couches, and an old pinball machine next to a refrigerator
full of beer and a table where four guys were playing cards in the center. It
was the grown-up version of the clubhouse Rabbit used to have, but girls were
certainly allowed in this one. Rabbit made sure to pause and smile at
Copperhead and Narcissa as he crossed the concrete floor. They had both been
sweet on Rabbit at one point or another, and he had hoped that they still were.
He would have probably gone over and spoken to the girls, had Diamond not
motioned him over. It was time for business.
Rabbit followed Diamond down the
hallway. It was so dark that the only thing he could see was the silver lined angular
shape on Diamond’s back. The den was dark and warm, the way the Snakes liked
it. Rabbit followed through the hallway and into the other half of the
building. This three story section must have originally been the factory
portion. There were tall windows on the far wall, several that had been broken
out. Three different levels of catwalks lined the walls; some broken, with
others barely hanging on, high above them. There was debris that had fallen
from the large hole in the roof and old metal pieces that used to hold the
machinery and conveyer belts in place, all of which had been pushed to the
front with the collapsed double doors or to the sides. Rattler and the others
had turned that part of the building into a practice area of sorts with a set
of wrestling mats and lined up bottles that were being used as a shooting
range.
BANG!
Rattler was holding a large .45
with an ivory handle and a laser sight attached to the bottom of the barrel. A
bit of smoke trailed off of the barrel as those present eyed the glass bottle
that Rattler had just shattered. He brought the gun up with a smile, his other
hand trailing down the handle. Rabbit thought it looked like Rattler was
stroking his erection, way too happy.
Rattler handed the piece off to the
man standing next to him who began to reload it. A girl that Rabbit didn’t know
had been watching the guys shoot, but now that Rabbit was here, she and another
member of the gang got up from the old bus seat that they had been sitting on
and left back down the dark hallway.
“Look who dropped by,” Rattler said
after he turned his attention to Rabbit. “I know you know Diamond, but have you
met Moccasin and Asp?”
“Nah, not yet.”
Rabbit shook both of their hands,
all smiles. These were the kind of people he wanted to be in with. Moccasin was
a tall guy who looked like he lived in the gym, but he had an impressive set of
shades and a hot pair of kicks. Asp was shorter and darker skinned, and his
rolled up sleeves showed off the numerous tattoos that lined his arms and neck.
Rabbit was pretty sure that Asp had a lot more that he couldn’t see, someone
who was probably addicted to them. Suddenly Rabbit wanted a tattoo.
“Now that that is all taken care
of, you ready to do some work?”
Rabbit nodded. Rattler motioned to
Moccasin and Asp who moved over to what Rabbit had thought was one of the piles
of old machinery. They pulled large metal piece aside to reveal a safe that had
been put inside one of the old large machines. A good hiding place. Rattler
knelt down to handle the dial. Rabbit noticed that Moccasin was giving him a
bit of a look, so he turned away until he heard the metal lock on the safe
clank and the door creak open.
Rabbit looked back as Rattler
pulled out a black satchel bag. He was smiling as he walked it over to one of
the other platforms and opened up. Rabbit was honestly not sure what he was
about to see, and when he was nervous, he talked.
“You said you had something you
needed done, Rattler. A way we could make some money.”
“Patience, Rabbit. Good things come
to those who wait.”
Rabbit nodded and smiled, asking
himself to please stay quiet. Rattler was digging through the satchel bag,
pulling out a smaller white bag. There was a noise that Rabbit heard, he had
good ears. He looked up towards the ceiling—squinting. Asp had glanced up as
well.
“What is it,” Rattler asked,
holding on tightly to the white bag.
“Probably nothing. This old ass
building is always making noise,” Moccasin said.
Rattler nodded. Asp slipped away
from the group, jumping up to one of the slanted metal walkways. Rabbit watched
him for a moment before Rattler began moving again. He was opening up the white
bag.
“Like I said, Rabbit, I’ve got
something new.” Rattler pulled two small plastic baggies from the larger white
bag. “This is new, and it is going to be hot. My supplier is calling it M.”
Rattler tossed the baggie to
Rabbit. It was filled with a reddish-brown powder that seemed to reflect the
natural light that was pouring in from one of the tall windows, giving the
substance an iridescent glow. Rabbit caught himself staring at it for a moment.
“What’s the catch? What makes it so
special?”
Rattler smirked at the question.
“Luck you, you’ll get to find out
first hand.”
“Huh,” Rabbit asked, but he had
already figured it out.
“Go ahead, do it. Get lit.”
“I don’t usually-“
“You wanted to do business, didn’t
you?” Rattler’s expression was still jovial for the most part, but Rabbit knew
he was very serious about this part.
“Rattler, you don’t really think
I’m a snitch do you?”
“Call it whatever you want. After
today though, you’ll be able to tell all of your customers exactly what they
are buying.”
Rabbit knew it was about to happen
one way or the other. He opened up the baggie, taking one more long look at the
brown substance. Moccasin had picked up a tray and placed it on one of the
stands near him. Rabbit poured half of the small pouch out and using the small
knife on the tray, began separating it into lines.
“What makes it brown,” Rabbit
asked, “chili powder?”
“You won’t care in a minute,” Moccasin
assured.
Rabbit didn’t fight it anymore, he
didn’t want the snakes to think there was any reason not to trust him. He put
his nose down to the tip of the line, examining the brown powder before using a
finger to close off his other nostril. One sharp inhale later, Rabbit had taken
the first line, and he noticed it burned. Powering through, he took the second
line, coming up from it wide-eyed and numbed.
“Just let it sink in,” Rattler
said. “This stuff only takes a minute or so to make your dreams come true.”
Rabbit smiled. He heard what
Rattler had said to him and thought that he had responded with something pretty
profound, but in actuality, his mouth never opened. He was focused on the tall
window with the broken glass at the top. The sun was shining in and to Rabbit
only, that light had just become a lot brighter. A lot of things were brighter
actually, and everything felt closer, friendlier. All of Rabbit’s senses were
stronger now, which was why he was suddenly touching himself.
“Moccasin, sit his ass on one of
the couches and get someone to watch him for a bit. We’ll finish talking about
business when he has had time to cool down.”
Rattler motioned for Diamond to
follow him. Both left down the hallway as Moccasin took hold of Rabbit’s arm,
leading him over to the old seat from the van. Moccasin sat him down, unaware
that the reason Rabbit was smiling so big was because he thought that it was
Copperhead and Narcissa who had come to keep him company. Asp jumped back down
from the crosswalk next to Moccasin.
“See anything?”
Asp shook his head. “Just the wind
I guess.”
“You were hoping it was his wolf
friend,” Moccasin said with a bit of a twisted smile, “weren’t you, Asp?”
There was an indifferent sound that
came from Asp’s left nostril as he took one more look around.
“I’m going to go check around the
outside,” Asp said, not answering the previous question.
“Wait, I don’t want to watch him.”
“Get one of the girls to do it
then.”
Moccasin liked Asp’s idea. He
waited a moment, after Asp had disappeared down the hallway, and then left that
way himself, leaving Rabbit on the old leather van seat, stretched out and
wide-eyed. Rabbit had done drugs in the past, enough to know what he needed to
and to realize that they could be helpful or harmful. He hated to not be in
control though, or when anything made him question himself. That wasn’t cool. This
was different though. He could see the real world, the things happening around
him, but he was sure as hell not seeing what everyone else was.
Oh, let me stop right here for a
moment little cubs and remind you all why these drugs are so bad. Rabbit did
this shit once and was pitiful, but most don’t stop there. You want more proof,
I’ll take you to see a leopard I know. You gotta be smart when messing with
them, cause they can be bullshit. Back to the story though.
What had started off as brighter
colors and what Rabbit called the sounds of Gaia whispering to him had expanded
as the M took effect. His blood felt like it was boiling and he needed to run,
but the wall of flowers wouldn’t let him. There was the hippopotamus also, and
the floating clock. Rabbit was fascinated by the flower wall though. It was
reminiscent of a tribute to Georgia O’Keeffe with a splash of Dali that had
aspirations of being a Rembrandt. Had the old masters had this drug though, how
much better they would have understood suffering.
One of the flowers in particular
had caught Rabbit’s attention. It had a vague face-like shape to it, something
cute and perky. Rabbit reached out for the flower, wanting nothing more than to
caress the most beautiful thing he had seen in that minute. It was warm to the
touch, taking a more detailed shape every second, morphing from a yellow wonder
into the face of a girl. It was a face he liked very much, Fox’s face. She was
smiling back at him now. He leaned in for that kiss, which was missed at lunch.
Fox’s face leaned in as well, willing and able to reward him. Rabbit was a nice
guy after all, and Fox wanted him.
Just as their lips touched though,
what should have been a sweet kiss was a knuckle sandwich. Rabbit took four
knuckles across the face and fell backwards in a stumble. He looked up, so that
he could look at himself. An exact copy of the original, cowboy hat, slick
kicks, and all giving him the evil eye. The new Rabbit pointed at him with a
commanding demeanor.
“You stay away from her, Rabbit.”
Rabbit was quite confused, but he
sure wasn’t afraid. He pushed himself forward and landed a punch on the evil
doppelganger, but took a few blows of his own right afterwards. The
shadowboxing fool wasn’t listening, figuring that he was fighting for love or
some such. He was strangling a broom at this point, wrestling around with it on
the ground.
“You’ll only get her hurt,” the
evil doppelganger broom shouted.
Rabbit squeezed the neck of his
clone harder, wanting it to be quiet. It didn’t feel right though, his fingers
collapsing in on themselves as the neck gave way to softer material that
buckled under his pressure. The paper-like substance spurted up through his
grip and went everywhere in a shower of green and white. Money fell all around
Rabbit in a pile. He gasped with delight, grabbing it with his hands and then
shoveling it into his shirt. The wind picked up though, carrying the money away
from Rabbit. He hurried to pick up what he could, running after the rest. It
was slipping away from him. He shoved money into his pockets, down his shorts,
scurrying to grab what he could. He was following it up a hill now, heading
towards a beautiful rainbow. That is where the money wanted to go, so
obviously, that was where Rabbit wanted to be as well.
He stumbled upwards, a steeper slow
now, grabbing at a few bills, with the majority still in sight next to the
rainbow. Things were beginning to slow down though. Rabbit’s mouth was dry and
his legs were becoming weak, but there was all of that money amongst the bright
colors of the fantastical looking rainbow. It was becoming hard to move now
though with this wind, strong, almost like someone was yelling at him.
Something struck Rabbit again, but
it hurt much worse this time. He had taken five across the face this time, in
the form of a slap, and then felt a hand on his arm, gripping tightly, with exquisitely
sharp nails. The rainbow was gone and the money had turned into blank white
paper in his pockets and in his hands, fading into ash.
“Snap out of it, you tweaked out
dipshit!”
That voice! He was sure it was
Fox’s. An angel, calling out to Rabbit, wanting to give him something better
than money and rainbows—that kiss. But as the world faded back into its greater
form of reality, he quickly realized that it was another slap the angel wanted
to bestow.
“Rattler would be pissed if off’d
yourself on your first taste of M.”
He could see her face now, against
the backdrop of the light coming in from the window as his vision cleared. The
frizzy red hair and green eyes meant that it wasn’t Fox. It was Copperhead in
her green halter top and jeans, with a strong grip on his arm, the other hand
poised and ready to slap again if need be. She stood beside him, at the edge of
a very high part of the catwalk which he apparently had climbed up to. Had she
not stopped him, Rabbit would have walked right off of there to a rude
awakening.
“There we are,” Copperhead said
with one more firm shake of his arm. “Let’s you and I get down off of here and
have a little sit before you do anything stupid.”
Rabbit did not protest. It was only
a few minutes before they were back on the leather seat from the old van, and
she had brought Rabbit some water to combat the dry mouth. Things were slowly
starting to make sense again and his face didn’t feel quite so numb. The whole
thing was a stern reminder of the multiple reasons that he did not dip into his
own product.
“Thanks.”
“Not a problem,” Copperhead said
with a smile. “Narcissa left with Coral, so I told them I would babysit.”
Rabbit nodded and asked his next
question hesitantly.
“Heh, yeah. I hope I didn’t do
anything too stupid…?”
“Well, when I came in you were
losing a fight to a broom.”
Copperhead’s smile was wider now,
playful with a hint of pity. She wrapped an arm around Rabbit and leaned in
closer to him, with her legs pulled up under her.
“You’re fine little Rabbit. I
wouldn’t say anything to hurt you.”
Her comment came with a small kiss
on his neck. Rabbit felt her breath exhale onto his skin and that was all he
needed for his confidence to come back. He turned to his side and brought his
face closer to hers. Copperhead’s eyes were a sea of emerald green and
stunningly entrancing. She closed a little bit more of the distance, making him
do the rest. Just as their lips touched a loud laugh, near that of a cackle,
erupted from the dark hallway. The room was even darker now by the way the sun
had moved, but Rabbit didn’t need to see to know that it was Rattler.
“Did you see her expression! That
she-cat will never show her face around this neighborhood again,” Rattler
joked.
“And hell if she’ll get the stain
out either,” Diamond chimed in.
With Rattler, Diamond, Moccasin,
and Asp returning through the doorway, Copperhead moved away, standing. She let
an impeccably kept and sharp red fingernail trail across Rabbit’s cheek to say
goodbye. Confident or not, Rabbit had been losing out today.
“He’s all yours, boys.”
Copperhead disappeared into the
dark hallway with a flash of red hair and that continued smile, leaving the
four snakes and Rabbit alone. Moccasin and Diamond watched Rabbit for a few
moments as he took another long drink from the water bottle, curious as to how
much the M had really affected him. Rattler had gone back to the safe, opening
it again and retrieving the satchel that he had brought out earlier. He removed
the white sack and looked inside, checking the contents, either paranoid or
cautious.
“Here’s the deal little Rabbit,”
Rattler said. “You break up a couple of these into samples, very small doses,
and distribute it as a little bit of a free taste to some of the usual suspects.
They will get the word around and after their first real taste, folks’ll be
lining up begging for it.”
Rattler threw Rabbit the bag. It
landed in his lap.
“You get me my ten thousand by this
time next week. It may sound like a lot, but if you’re as good as you like to
say that you are, shouldn’t be a thing.”
Rabbit nodded, lifting up the bag
in his hands. He was still just a bit woozy, coming down harder than he had in
a long time. There was a moment of silence before Rabbit realized that Rattler
was waiting on some sort of confirmation. Rabbit nodded twice, feeling a
headache coming on.
“Any questions?”
Rabbit was thinking about what he
held in his hand, how he was going to sell it.
“Why is it called M?”
“Hell if I know,” Rattler said
honestly. “It came from a supplier up state, and I paid good money for it.
Didn’t care much what the name was.”
Rabbit nodded, standing up. He
remembered that this was his big opportunity to break out.
“You got it. I’ll get it out, just
leave it to me.”
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