Click-flash, and the whole scene was bathed in stark white light, making it all the more gruesome. Skeletons, sitting lined up on a park bench, their sightless eyes staring up at the sky.
Arthur stood up, wound the film to the next slot, and got to one knee again. He lined up the shot through the viewfinder, thought better of it, and lay prone to maximize the effect. Yes, this shot was better. This shot told a story.
Park bench up close, looming in the foreground of the image, massive. Four skeletons, still dressed in their now-tattered Sunday clothes, their heads turned to the sky, their jaws agape in what could have just been the slackening of the jaw in death, could have been traces of the wonder they felt at their last sight. Perhaps, since it was Sunday, they had believed that it was God they were seeing, some sort of awful rapture that the Bible couldn’t have predicted.
In a sense, they would have been right.
Arthur took a few more shots, then moved on.
A few moments later, maybe ten or more steps, he found another photo waiting to happen. This was a small child’s skeleton, eternally perched at the top of a playground slide. The slide itself was a warped tangle of melted metal, but the ladder, the handrails, and the child were all still miraculously intact.
The child was looking off towards the horizon, his fingertips barely touching the handrails, as though he’d wanted to make sure that he didn’t lose his hard-fought position at the top of the slide to the other children waiting below while he looked over at this new distraction. Arthur could see other children at the bottom of the slide, maybe only two or three, possibly as many as ten. It would be hard to give an exact number without picking through the tangle of bones at the bottom of the ladder.
Arthur dropped to one knee, his eye automatically framing the shot for maximum impact.
After he was done, he moved on.
He stopped at the top of a hill, taking a panoramic shot of a snarl of traffic, their owners slumped over the steering wheels of their vehicles. Some of the skeletons inside still had their hands forever locked in the ten-and-two position, others had one arm slung around skeletons in the passenger seats, others had one bony arm resting on open windows.
Click-flash, and none of the subjects had to be persuaded to smile for the camera.
Arthur walked on, stopping to snap the Welcome to Fabulous Las Vegas, Nevada sign, now blackened around the edges. One of the support struts had snapped, and it now leaned like a drunk who just dropped his keys. Beyond, the glut of casinos, fast food joints, and glittering neon signs all lay in ruins.
He walked on, going into one of the casinos on a whim. This one was still relatively intact, and he could see row after row of skeletons sitting in front of card tables, roulette wheels and slot machines. Most of the slot machines were still in working order, clanging and banging, some still shouting their attract messages over and over into the gloom. Some of the skeletons were still clutching what had been plastic cups full of nickels and quarters. Now, the cups had melted into the skeleton's hands like unattended candles, and the change had spilled onto the floor, where they had melted and reformed in the intense heat into countless glittering constellations on the carpeted floor. Click-flash, and Arthur moved on.
He moved deeper into the casino, towards the entertainment and feeding areas. Even though the casinos advertised them as buffets, Arthur couldn’t help but see them now as troughs, with pigs lined up for their meals. The air was ripe with the conflicting smells of rotting, overcooked food still sitting in the stainless steel tubs. The sneeze-guards had exploded in the intense heat of the blast, and lay in glittering shards of dull safety glass on the ground. Most of the tables had at least one skeleton sitting at them, some with plates full of meals that would never be finished.
Click-flash.
Arthur left the casino. As he walked out, one of the machines went crazy, lighting up and whooping, the word “JACKPOT” flashing over and over. The machine began spitting out dozens of coins, then hundreds of them. Arthur didn’t bother to pick them up.
He walked through the ruins of the strip, not sure what he was looking for. He didn’t find it, at least not on the strip. On a whim, he turned into one of the pawn shops that dotted the surrounding areas.
Inside, there were more skeletons, thrown around the store. Two of them were still standing by the register, still in the act of haggling over something, or perhaps purchasing an item. Arthur got a little closer, and as he did so, he could see what was laying on the counter between them.
A pistol. A pistol and a box of ammo.
Click-flash, and Arthur left the pawnshop. But not before scooping up the items on the counter.
Arthur turned back towards the strip. He walked into the nicest standing hotel he could find. He stopped by the registration desk, no one challenging him as he stepped behind it and selected a key.
He walked further into the hotel, dismissing the glowing banks of elevators, apparently still working amidst all of the carnage. He took the stairs instead. Just to be safe.
The stairwell was refreshingly cool, and almost startlingly quiet after the idiot clamor of the slot machines in the room behind him. He began to mount the stairs slowly.
He looked at the key on each landing, and nodding to himself, continued upwards until he reached the top floor.
The hallway was mostly empty. There were two skeletons up here, one still in the act of unlocking his door. The other was sprawled near a service cart, loaded down with trays. Arthur figured this skeleton had been the bellboy. Click-flash.
He walked up and down the hallway, checking the room numbers until he found the one that corresponded with the key he had filched from the registration desk. He slipped it into the lock and twisted. It turned smoothly.
The room was empty, thank God. Arthur walked into the room, taking in the view from the expansive window that took up nearly the entire west wall. He stood where he was for a moment, watching the sun sink below the horizon. After it had disappeared, Arthur walked into the room and sat down on the bed. He stared off blankly towards the horizon for what seemed like hours, random thoughts flitting back and forth across his mind.
After a while, he stood up and walked over to the minibar, emptied it, and set to work emptying the miniature bottles as well.
He sat for a moment after he had emptied the last bottle, a single thought going through his head. These photos are the best thing I’ve ever done, he thought. I bet I could win the Pulitzer with these.
He took the gun out of his jacket pocket, and loaded it with a single shell. Let the fates decide, he thought incoherently, and spun the chambers, finding the soft zzzzz! sound strangely soothing. When they stopped, he stuck the barrel in his mouth and pulled the trigger.
Click-flash.
Friday, March 28, 2008
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8 comments:
Ben- you've moved too far past Demonica. Don't take that wrong, just take that publisher this and the afterlife junkshop too! I'm telling you, you've got to Richard Bachman Demonica- this chance is huge, and you deserve it.
This short is gorgeous.
I heart this story. A lot. I heart it a lot. This story.
Can I just say that I find it strange that you use the word gorgeous to describe a story about a huge nuclear apocalypse that basically melted everyone and everything in Vegas?
This story is pretty and nicely finished.
Keltin called something pretty...
Haha Keltin is a giiiiiiiirl
Look at the girly-man! But seriously, other than the old couple waiting for the train (I can't remember the title at the moment) this is my favorite think you've written.
Final purchases is the name of that particular story you're thinking of, and if I wasn't ass tired I'd post it right now. As it is, I'll get to it. Strangely enough, I have Andrew to thank for that story. I just heard him doing that closing announcement, and then I remember thinking that he over-enunciated the words "final purchases" and bingo-bango-blammo, an hour later I had me a fine story. Although that one didn't make John cry. Go me.
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