Blackbirds

FOUR

The Million-Dollar Question

 

She can still hear the sound as the knife pulls out of the one eye and the sound as it plunges into the other. And him speaking her name… Miriam? It bounces around her skull like a ricocheting bullet.

 

Her hand feels like it's touching a hot stove. She gasps and jerks, pulling it away.

 

Her head slams into the passenger side window. Not enough to crack it, but enough where she sees stars. The unlit cigarette drops from her lips and tumbles into her lap.

 

"Do you know me?" she asks, blinking away the white spots. Louis, of course, looks confused.

 

"I don't know if anybody knows anybody," he says.

 

"No!" she barks, sharp, too sharp, and shakes her head. "I mean, have we met? We don't know each other?"

 

Louis still has his hand hanging out there from where she grabbed it, but now he slowly pulls back, like any fast movement might cause him to lose it.

 

"No. We don't know each other."

 

She rubs her eyes. "Do you know anyone named Miriam?"

 

"I don't think so. No."

 

He's watching her now like she's a rattlesnake. He's got one hand on the wheel and the other hanging free – just in case the rattlesnake decides to bite, she thinks. He probably thinks she's on drugs. If only.

 

Shit. She knows how this adds up. This is a bad equation. Her guts roil.

 

"Stop the truck," she says.

 

"What? The truck? No. Let me get to a–"

 

"Stop the goddamn truck!" This time it's a hoarse scream. She doesn't mean it to be, but that's how it comes out. And the reminder of how little control she really has only furthers the feeling that she is weightless, dizzy, spiraling into a yawning black hole.

 

Louis is kind enough not to punch the brake. He eases it in, slow. The hydraulics whine. He brings the truck over to the shoulder and lets it idle.

 

"Okay. Calm down," he says, putting his hands out.

 

Miriam grits her teeth. "That's the worst thing you can ever say to somebody who's not calm. It's just gas on a fire, Louis."

 

"I'm sorry. I'm not… trained in this."

 

This? He means dealing with crazy people. Which she is, probably.

 

"I'm not trained in being this way, either." Though, she thinks, I'm getting better with it. Week by week, month by month, year by bloody year. One day, it'll be water off a duck's back.

 

"What's wrong?" he asks.

 

"That's the million-dollar question."

 

"You can tell me."

 

"I can't, I really can't. You wouldn't–" She takes a deep breath. "I have to go."

 

"We're in the middle of nowhere."

 

"It's America. Nowhere is nowhere. Everywhere is somewhere."

 

"I can't let you do that."

 

She fishes the cigarette from her lap and, with trembling hands, tucks it behind her ear. "You're a very nice man, Louis. But you will let me get out of this truck, because you know now that I am off my bloody rocker. I see the look on your face. Already you're thinking, she's not worth the trouble. And I'm not. I'm a curse. I'm an infected boil on your neck. Best thing I can do for you is get away from you. Best thing you can do is lance the boil."

 

Grabbing her messenger bag, she pops the door.

 

"Wait!" he says.

 

She ignores him and hops out onto the cracked and crumbling highway shoulder. Her feet plant into a murky puddle, soaking through.

 

Louis slides over onto the passenger side and pops the glove box.

 

"Wait, here," he says, going through the compartment. He pulls out a white envelope, and as he cracks it, she sees what waits within:

 

Money. A thick wad of it, all Andrew Jacksons.

 

With a callused thumb and forefinger he peels out five bills, then thrusts them at her.

 

"Take it."

 

"Go fuck yourself."

 

He looks hurt. Good. She needs to hurt him. She hates doing it. But it's like medicine. Everybody needs their medicine. Tastes bad. Does wonders.

 

"I have plenty."

 

It's the last thing she wants to know. It makes him a mark. She can't help but picture him as roadkill now, and her picking at his exposed guts with a vulture's beak.

 

"I'm not a charity case," she says, even though she knows she is.

 

His hurt has already scabbed over and become something else. He's angry now. He grabs her hand, hard enough to force her but not so it hurts, and presses the money into her palm. "It's a hundred dollars."

 

"Louis–"

 

"Listen. Listen. Walk the way we were driving. It'll be a halfhour or so. You'll find a motel down that way, a motor lodge, it's like a… a series of bungalows. There's a gas station and a bar. You keep walking, you'll find it. But get off the road. You don't know what kind of weirdoes are out here at one o'clock in the morning."

 

"I know what kind of weirdoes are out here," she says, because she's one of them. Miriam takes the money. She looks into Louis's eyes: He's trying to be firm, but even now the anger is melting, the scab drying up and flaking away.

 

"You going to be okay?" he asks.

 

"I'm always okay," she says. "You best forget you ever met me."

 

Miriam pulls away from him and walks off. Head down. Don't look back, dummy.

 

She needs a drink.

 

Chuck Wendig's books