Tag Archives: Fiction

“Love Tokens in the Sunflower Field” Short Story by Billy Stanton

"Love Tokens in the Sunflower Field" Fiction by Billy Stanton

What, in the end, is the difference between a field of sunflowers and a field of brick-built houses? Both live for a while, both eventually die, it’s just a matter of time doling out unequally heaped bowls of itself one to the other to push the whole thing along. The rot’s different with both, sure, but nothing lasts forever. One grows by itself once the seeds have been sown and the other takes a man’s hands a lot of labour to stand tall for its allotted period. Labour and time, those are the things that count.
            Luke Johnson has taken eight pay-packets and two broken love tokens from the field. One is for labour, the other is from time.
            There’s been a lot of anger since it was announced that Wimpey had bought up the field. Some said it was the last beauty spot on the face of the county being levelled; a final dereliction of duty by the local wardens of the greenbelt. But there had been a rickety garage jutting out into the field as long as Jack could remember: two long and low concrete buildings with rusting doors, a swamp of a forecourt and the obliterated chassis of trucks and hatchbacks and the tops of Range Rovers. People are able to overlook ugliness when it suits them. Thirty homes won’t make for a lot more people around. The quiet won’t be too badly broken. The new commuters might even save the train station, a forlorn branch-line stop threatened with closure that the current station master has given up on. The lilacs he planted long ago in the soil boxes have rotted. They stink. A dirty protest against GWR.
            It is only Luke’s second big job on a building site. Times are different now; it used to be that smart lads in the village could become models of social mobility, heading away from the farms for offices in the capitol or the county seat. Parents swore against their offspring having to sweat and suffer like them; but this western Akenfield no longer offers cannon fodder for the plush new industries because there are no plush new industries. No more silver-lit plexiglass lives. Everywhere in the county seems to be on its knees. Luke tried for a job where the last bit of money was flowing. However, he noticed the head of the local branch of the prestigious estate agents wore a signet ring on his little finger and Luke thought that a bad sign. He saw the landowners themselves wearing those sometimes, like they were all in a little cult. Luke supposed they were. The interview was over quickly. The estate agent’s brochures showed in their advertising blather the names of the schools that would have gotten Luke a job if only he could have put them on his CV. Some things have a steel ring around them, just like the city of London.
            Luke counts out time via his labour. Each round of cement mixing, each new foot of stacked bricks or deepness in the foundation holes, has a portion of more-or-less precise minutes or hours fixed to it. When Luke is with the strict workers he doesn’t ever need to look at his watch. When he is with the bad it’s more tricky, but he’s managed to find the rhythms even in their chaos.
            Most the rest of the men roll in in Mercedes and Ford transit vans at around five or six each morning. They come from the cheap hotels in town. Adrift and alone apart from each other, divested of an individual life for long, long stretches and underpaid, they drink and drink all night. They stagger and stumble over the site when they come in. The site managers take lines of cocaine in their jerry-built office to make sure they have the energy to carry on controlling the doing. Sometimes they share.

            But Luke is okay. Okay for now. He has the money and he has the love tokens. He supposed the sunflower field hadn’t always been a sunflower field; long before it had been enclosed, he imagined, it might have been some lover’s glen or meadows, a meeting point for sweethearts just outside the confines of the village proper and on the far side from the old church. It was all fumbling in the long grass back then. Luke had heard old songs on the pubs’ Trad Nights (the area had a history for it; scholars still turned up occasionally); half of them seemed to be about men back from wars at sea or on the land, testing their betrothed’s loyalty in their absence by wearing disguises and making clumsy passes, before revealing their identity by the brandishing of half a broken token of devotion when the woman acquiesced or demurred. One of Luke’s tokens was broken in half in this manner; it was an unimpressive old copper ring, definitely worn not for show but simply for symbolism. It had a simple engraving that ran along and over the split: “When I’m gone from you”. Luke had found both halves buried together when he’d been digging; he assumed the couple had left it in the ground when their had separation ended. He liked that. It was like planting a sunflower seed.
            The other token was a coin, bent inwards on the edge of each side. It had two sets of initials, overlapping in the centre of a love-heart with an arrow shot through it: A.J. and S.H. Luke had seen one like this once in the county museum on a school trip. It had fascinated him because there was nothing on it then but an engraving of a stick figure hanging from a noose, with the label ‘1814’ beneath. He’d never been able to decide on who that souvenir was for.

            Luke treasured these droppings more than the real money he was collecting. He figured that would be the way for most when they dug up something deep and forgotten from the ground of their homestead. Besides, time mattered more to him than labour. He’d be labouring his whole life, no doubt, except for when things were really rough. But the labour would never be for him. He helped build nice houses for other people; nice even though they didn’t have a proper garden in order to make room for more plots on the development. Someone would build him a home or had already built it, but it would be smaller and cheaper and nastier than these. That was the way it went. But no-one ever had enough time, right at the final point, when all that labouring for others had been got through.
            The love tokens were a sign that this village, maybe itself on its own long and slow deathbed with its family nowhere to be found to help support it, had held glorious life in its allotted period. Once, Luke had read that God was spread in all things; that he was in man, earth, bud, branch, cattle, beam and bell. Most people would agree that God is in a sunflower, but not in a Wimpey home. Luke wasn’t so sure of that. It all seemed much of a same to him. Men might hide that truth sometimes, but the love tokens were a reminder. There were currents of life and light beneath everything. That was pure religion; a godless God or millions, billions of Gods. Older than Christianity, that way of seeing things. On an evening a few years ago, he’d been watching a documentary on television and when the presenter started talking about “history buried in the ground”, the light that always turned itself on banged itself instead hard three times against the side of his parent’s bookcase. Knock, knock, knock. Luke thought maybe he’d find a third token, too. Things move in synchronicity in that way. They have their own strange rhythms.
            Dig for Victory. That was a war slogan, emblazoned across different posters. There was a stark sepia-toned one with a boot digging a spade into a mound of earth, a spade that stood true and straight and proud to suggest to the pliant observer a nation remaining resilient; there was one with a beaming healthy farm worker in white shirt-sleeves puffing on a pipe and carrying a laden bucket of vegetables; there was another showing the back of a small child in sunhat and short trousers carrying a spade and redolent more of train company adverts for the seaside than the struggles of wartime. Luke didn’t like any of them much. The first seemed almost fascistic; the red background and the earth made him think of that ‘blood and soil’ Nazi line, which wasn’t helped by the man’s footwear being reminiscent of a jackboot. The second’s farmhand didn’t look like any that Luke had ever seen; he was a pink-cheeked gentleman in dress-up, keeping the best produce for himself. The third seemed to suggest the imminent re-introduction of child labour and the final puncturing of all daydreaming. But he liked the slogan- or, at least, he had come to, once he’d managed to shorn it of its propaganda and put it in a new place.
            Dig for Victory. Aye, he could do that. He could keep on doing that. He could go on finding things. He had to. As long as he could work out what victory actually meant in the final reckoning. That was the hard part. Harder than it had been for decades, probably. That would take real time and real labour and that pure religion.


Billy Stanton is a young working-class writer and filmmaker based in London, and originally from Portsmouth. His story ‘Screwfix’ was recently published in ‘New Towns’ (Wild Pressed Books). His short fiction has also appeared in Horla, The Chamber, Tigershark and (soon) Wyldblood magazines. His latest short film ‘Noli is currently in post-production. His blog can be found at: steelcathedrals.wordpress.com


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If you like dark fiction, you may also want to check out The Chamber Magazine.

“Baikonur Bitch” Fiction by Roly Andrews

Rural Fiction Magazine: "Baikonur Bitch" Fiction by Roly Andrews

“No, you definitely can’t see the Big Dipper from Dunsandle, but you can see the Southern Cross alright!”

She didn’t acknowledge me, but I knew she’d heard and understood.

I looked down at her again.

“You really are a cutie,” I cooed.

Still no response; her fuscous eyes staring, fixating on the galaxies high above, pure amazement on her face.

I’d only just met her.

I’d just popped out of the Hall to smoke a durry and take a piss. I’d walked around the side of the old wooden building towards the domain behind, peering into the windows as I went by. I’d briefly watched Athol Simmons in the Hall Office, trying his hardest to familiarise himself with Glenys Hollis’s topography. While Athol struggled to unhinge Glenys’s bra, the Kirwee Cooees played their interpretation of Lonnie Donegan’s “Cumberland Gap”. It seemed way too appropriate.

I kept walking, nearly tripping over young Jimmy Karsten, who was on his knees praying to Bacchus. He was retching and heaving up copious quantities of beer and Mrs Stott’s coronation chicken. Too much beer with too much fancy food on top, I reckoned. Dance Hall suppers were an institution invented only for womenfolk, teetotallers, fat bastards, and the young who had far more beer on board than they should. I’d always taken the view that dance Hall suppers were a danger to one’s health. Sav’s bathing in tomato sauce and cheese on toothpicks embedded in oranges were way too fancy; best to bring your own. 

“Better get home, boy,” I growled. “Get some water into you and some sleep. You don’t want your old man seeing you like this. Besides, I can’t see your old man doing the milking in the morning; he’s almost as drunk as you are.”

I walked on; behind me, Jimmy groaned loudly, retched, then heaved again.

After taking my leak and lighting up, I continued my short walk. My ears were ringing. The batting away of Jenny Anderson’s continual affections was becoming irritating and tiring. I’d had enough.

“Come dance with me, Archie . . . promise me at least one dance, Archie, please . . . Archie, would you like to sit with me at supper? I made your favourite curried eggs . . . oh, Archie, you do look so handsome tonight!” 

For fuck’s sake, woman!

Leave me be.

Hadn’t I told her as much a hundred times before?

I know Jenny is lonely. Ever since Ted Cooper rolled his tractor, she’s been like a bitch on heat. I also know four hundred acres are way too much for one woman to manage on her own. Her farm backs onto mine, so I help her out when I can.

I know too, she cries herself to sleep. I hear her sometimes through the still lonely nights—her grief-stricken wails wafting through the macrocarpas and settling softly on my bedroom windowsill. I also know she keeps her backdoor unlocked, hoping a knight in shining armour will stroll through. And, very occasionally, I do just that.

But I’m no knight in shining armour. I’m not there to save or rescue her. I have no interest in absolving her pain or nightmares. I’m just knocking her off; it doesn’t mean I want her, and it certainly doesn’t mean I want to get hitched. She’s pretty enough, but it’s only for fun. I like being single. I like being my own man.

But tonight . . . tonight, she’d taken things way too far.

“Imagine,” she said, “two thousand acres and some sons to look after them, and then us when we get too old!”

Since when did an occasional romp in the sack evolve into a lifetime of toil and complaisance? There’s a big difference between taking her and taking her away. I don’t want a bar of it, and I don’t want a bar of all her fussing and constant need to be taken care of.

For fuck’s sake, woman! I’d had enough, and I told her.

“Jenny,” I said, “look, I’m happy enough ploughing your front paddock, but there’s no way on God’s earth I’ll be planting any swede’s or hitching my tractor to your harvester.”

I stopped twenty yards short of the wobbly bench seat overlooking the reedy duck pond. That’s when I saw a silhouette I didn’t recognise. Sitting by the bench was one of the most beautiful things I’d seen in a long time.

“Hello there,” I whispered, trying not to frighten her.

“Aren’t you lovely?” I muttered to myself through pursed lips, ensuring she couldn’t hear.

She sat aloof, petite and pretty. She held herself proudly; her head was tilted high toward the stars, gazing at the sparkling night sky. Her tight athletic form told me she was strong, independent, and not to be trifled with. I liked that.

I walked toward where she sat, calmly sitting beside her, slowly wrapping my arms around her shoulders. I felt her relax; felt her body weight shift against mine. She was warm and unworried by my attention. I gently stroked her face with the back of my hand. She exposed her graceful neck. I tickled under her chin.

“You really are a beautiful girl,” I sighed.

“You want something to eat? Got some dressed pies in the back of my truck,” I said proudly, “picked ’em up this afternoon. Dunsandle General Store makes the best-dressed pies in the universe.”

I slapped her rump. “Come on, follow me.”

I walked toward my old Nash. It was parked in a sea of gravel and potholes. Under the bright starlight, she stood aloof and proud. She looked like a beached metallic shark, ready to roar into action with a single swish of her rusty tail fins. Yanking open one of her stiff back doors, I reached in and pulled out two cold dressed pies. I held one out—my new friend looked and stole a sniff, then greedily took the pie from my hand, wolfing it down instantly.

“They’re good, aren’t they? Especially the beetroot, eh? Even cold!”

She was ravenous, so I gave her mine as well. Again, she inhaled it.

While she was eating, I studied her form. Petite but muscular, alert and intelligent. Young. Pretty as a picture, obedient and calm. She was a perfect specimen.

“I’m going to have some fun with you,” I muttered a bit too loudly.

“Come,” I said—now walking back toward the Hall.

She followed without question or hesitation.

“Good girl!”

As I approached the Hall, the Kirwee Cooees were murdering Buddy Holly.

His silent screams overpowered by the crackly Gibson amp and pitchy vocals.

Do, do, do, do, well, that’ll be the day.

Please let that be true!

Yeah, yeah, yeah, make me cry.

You’re already breaking my heart and killing my ears. I’m nearly there.

Wop, wop, wop, you gonna leave me.

I will soon mate unless you shut the fuck up.

‘Cause, that’ll be the day-hey-hey when I die.

Now, that would be a blessing.  

Many people don’t know this, but Buddy Holly and his Crickets—in fact, all the crickets within a mile of Dunsandle Memorial Hall—died a gruesome death on the evening of November the 4th, 1957. Artistry and craft crashing to earth in great balls of fire (yes, I know that was Jerry Lee Lewis), butchered, massacred; ashes scattered asunder by the musical inabilities of Kirwee’s best.

As I approached the front of the Hall, I saw Jenny Anderson sitting languidly on the concrete steps. Her legs splayed beneath her yellow circle dress like supper toothpicks protruding from a soft block of cheese. She was bawling her eyes out.

Fuck me, I thought.

A semi-circle of women surrounded her, her tears seemingly draining her strength and form but fortifying those of her companions. Jenny was being comforted and mollycoddled by the Coleman sisters-in-law. Mrs Stott, who would sooner fart in church than miss out on any gossip or drama was also in the thick of it. Even Glenys Hollis was there, making a fuss and rubbing Jenny’s back. I just hoped she had had the time to stuff herself back into her undergarments. God knows anything could pop out when you’re leaning over like that. The women were holding a sacred pow-wow, and I had no reason to think I wasn’t the subject of their distemper.

“You bastard,” Glenys spat as I caught her eye.

“You lousy bastard, I don’t know what Jenny sees in you.”

The Coleman women nodded their heads in agreement. Mrs Stott just stood there, swollen hands resting on ample hips. Five hostile women are five too many for me. I turned quickly and proceeded to go back from whence I came.

“Archie Cleary, stop right there!” Mrs Stott ordered.

I froze. The only thing bigger and scarier than Mrs Stott in these parts was her temper.

“Who’s that bitch belong to?” she demanded, her hand extended, index finger pointing and waving.

“Don’t know,” I answered honestly. “I found her; I’m gonna take her home. Gonna train her up—trial her. I reckon she’d make a mighty fine sheepdog.”

“You can’t go around picking up random strays and taking them home, Archie Cleary. She doesn’t belong to you.”

“She doesn’t belong to anyone,” I shot back, “she’s not from these parts, never seen the like of her before. She’s a beauty, though, smart too! For all I know, she might have come from outta space. She’s like-a angel from heaven.”

“Don’t be daft. You leave that dog be. How do you know she wants to go with you? Come here, sweetie,” Mrs Stott called, slapping her pudding-like hands on her jellied thighs.

Without hesitation or thought, my newfound fickle friend trotted off. She sniffed Mrs Stott’s hands, no doubt the scent of coronation chicken still lingering deep within their pores. Then she sat next to Jenny Anderson and started licking the tears and hair from her ruddy face. Jenny wrapped her arm around the dog.

“Jesus,” I exclaimed, walking toward the steps to grab the dog by its scruff. As I approached, the dog bared its teeth, snarled, and growled, her body language telling me, come any closer mate, and I’ll have your guts for garters.

I stepped back—six sets of eyes drilling into me. No one spoke. It was a Selwyn stand-off. There could only be one loser, who was likely to be me. Eventually, I retreated. There was nothing to be gained in staying.

As I pulled the Nash out of the car park, I looked back into the rear vision mirror. Jenny Anderson wasn’t crying anymore. She was rubbing the belly of her newfound companion, who was lolling around her feet, tongue hanging out. I smiled a half-smile. Jenny had at last found her knight in shining armour. I might have broken her heart but a four-legged stranger had started to mend it.

Half a mile down the road, I came across Jimmy Karsten stumbling home. He had seven miles to go, and his one step forward and two to the side were never gonna help the cows get milked in the morning. I pulled over. “Jump in,” I said, “I’ll take you home.”

After dropping him off, I turned on the radio. The NZBC news at midnight came on. The headline story was about the Russians launching another satellite. And even more incredible than that, they had put a dog inside the satellite! One of the first living creatures in space.

Well, fancy that! I thought—fancy that.


Roly Andrews lives in Nelson, NZ; in his spare time, he enjoys tramping. After many years of practising, he is still trying to learn to play the trombone! A champion for everyone, he has mentored rough sleepers and supported people affected by suicide. He advocates for the rights of people living with disabilities. Your Site ‹ Roly Andrews – Story Teller — WordPress.com


If you enjoyed this story, you might also enjoy “Passing Through Jenkins Thicket” by Edward N. McConnell.

If you like stories with a dark edge to them, check out The Chamber Magazine.

“Pay at the Pump” Fiction by Kay Summers

"Pay at the Pump" Dark Fiction by Kay Summers for Rural Fiction Magazine

The killer pulled into the gas station slowly, tires crunching over the loose gravel dotting the asphalt. The station was small, one of those old stations right outside small towns where the prices are posted on signs with numbers someone changes by hand. It sported two pumps of an elderly vintage, and when the killer pulled alongside the first one, he saw the paper, handwritten sign taped over the handle: “Out of Order.” Sighing inwardly, he pulled ten feet forward to access the second pump. A similarly scrawled sign taped over the credit card slot read: “Pay Inside.”

With another sigh, this one audible, the kind that fills a given space with the weary frustration of its owner, he put the car into park, popped the gas tank open, and turned off the engine. The killer preferred to pay at the pump rather than walking inside ahead of time, waiting on whatever patron was buying scratch-off tickets and beef jerky, and then estimating how much he’d need to fill his tank. It was an inexact science at best, and it’d inevitably leave him with a gas gauge hovering just below the full line, as unsatisfying ending to a gas transaction if ever there was one.

He’d never understood people who said things like, “I’m just going to get five dollars of gas,” or shit like that. How could you possibly keep track of your fuel with a gauge that was forever short of full, never stopping at the top, just floating somewhere between half and three-quarters of a tank?

The door to the store was glass with one of those metal handlebars bisecting it. The kind that leaked heat in the winter and AC in the summer, which wasn’t the killer’s problem, but he did ponder the wasted money and energy for a second. The door swung easily, and the small bell hanging from a string on the inside tinkled to announce his entrance.

The clerk was seated behind the counter. This station was small, of course, and in one of those towns that liked to think it had low crime, so there was no glass barrier protecting the employee. More likely than a low crime rate was the chance that there was a shotgun underneath the counter, just by the man’s knees, providing assurance as he read the newspaper, drank coffee, and conducted the odd transaction or two that probably occurred no more than twice an hour; three times, tops.

Peering over his paper, the heavyset man, dressed in blue work chinos and a striped, short-sleeved button-up with his name stitched on the pocket—Stanley, it said—sighed as well, folding his paper carefully and setting it on the counter before regarding the killer over the bridge of his reading glasses.

“Fill ‘er up?” The man asked.

So, he wouldn’t have to guess how much to pay. That was a plus. He nodded, and the man pushed a few buttons on the console to his left, nodding back at the killer and grunting, “Go ’head, then.”

The killer didn’t know gas stations still existed where a person would be trusted to come back in and pay after filling up the tank. But apparently, here in the wilds of Georgia, they did.

Post fill-up, the clerk—Stanley—was friendlier. “That a hybrid?” he asked with genuine interest. “How many miles you get?”

Twenty years ago, the version of this man would’ve no doubt viewed such a car with suspicion, but now, with gas prices spiking, everybody and their grandma was interested in hybrids—what kinds of batteries they took, whether or not it had any pick-up, if he’d ever topped 50 miles per gallon, you name it.

“Averages about 45 on the highway,” the killer replied. “More than 38 in town.”

“That right? That’s the opposite of what you read about them,” Stanley quizzed.

“Yeah, I know,” the killer answered. “They got it all backwards, at least with mine.”

Stanley had a few more questions, and the killer, whose name was Tod, pronounced Todd but with just the one “d,” indulged him. Tod normally hated small talk—not because of his profession, though. He’d always been bad at it, not like those kids who could chatter away to a stranger in the aisle of a grocery store, telling some stranger all their momma’s business while she stood further down the aisle, trying to remember if they needed Pop-tarts or not. Tod had been the kid who stood, mutely, while some random adult asked random questions about what grade he was in and did he like his teacher and what not.

But in a strange town, with a job to do, it paid to be a little friendly, because in the South, you stood out more if you weren’t. He was known to be quiet in his own hometown down by the Gulf in Alabama, but here, he was more likely to be remembered if he didn’t converse than if he did.

Also, it was possible Stanley could help him.

After it was clear that Stanley’s curiosity about current hybrid technology had been sated, and he began to pick up his paper again, Tod ventured, casually: “Got any motels close by around here? I’ve got a long drive tomorrow, and I’d love to rest up, watch a little TV, catch a few zzz’s.”

Stanley, he knew, was likely to recommend the kind of place he was unlikely to find on hotels.com—a one-story motel with doors that opened right to your parking spot and clerks who didn’t mind taking cash with no reservation. Stanley did not disappoint, directing him to a homely establishment just about two miles down the same state highway and on the right. The Olde Towne Motel, it was called, and Tod knew the stylish nature of the extra “e’s” wouldn’t be reflected in the accommodations, but that was more than fine. Places like this catered to people who maintained a very small footprint in this world, whether they stayed a night or lived here, and they were unlikely to notice him or care if they did. They all had more than enough worries to occupy their time.

The room was gross, of course, but Tod had stayed in many worse places while in the military. A place that had a bed, even if he needed to don a Haz-Mat suit before lying on it, was superior in every way to a dugout in the mountainous desert or a back room in some shot-up house in Baghdad.

There was an flat-screen TV, the free-standing kind that you could get on the after-Thanksgiving Day sales at Wal-Mart if you were ready to take your life in your hands and do battle with all the heavyset ladies, Black and white, who’d crowd into surging hordes of shoppers against the closed doors, sprinting—their big chests heaving and bouncing—as they grabbed shopping carts and ran like hell for the electronics section as soon as the floodgates opened. It was scarcely bigger than the flat-screen monitor the killer used in his workstation back at his house, and the color on it was flat, garish, home-video quality circa 2006, making everything he tried to watch look like an episode of “Cops.”

Passing time in places like this required patience, and Tod had that in abundance. He was waiting on a call from his handler, Whippet, a man he knew from their mutual time in the military. Whippet was the guy who’d hooked him up with this gig, in those first disorienting, lonely days after he returned from his final combat tour with too much time on his hands and too much stored-up adrenaline and banked hypervigilance to enjoy it. Whippet had started his own business, helping people rid themselves of troublesome neighbors, acquaintances, and the occasional husband, when he returned, and his recruitment pitch to Tod had been simple: “Hey, man. Remember how they kept calling us ‘trained killers’ and all that bullshit? Well, I say stick with what you’re good at. Fuck trying to make it in the straight world. They trained us, and fairly expensively, wouldn’t you say? Might as well use it.”

And it had been, in the end, that simple. There was no shortage of small-town people with petty grudges they’d been carrying around for years. Being able to unburden oneself from, say, the anger one might feel at the snooty prep who’d called you fat in junior high, then grown up and married some Tuscaloosa business school graduate with a beer gut who golfed, an ever-present dumbass visor on his head, and moved to his wife’s town to open his own investment business, keeping selfsame preppy girl in Vineyard Vines and Lilly Pulitzer shifts until the end of time, was an appealing prospect for some. All Tod had to do was the take the contract from Whippet and figure out a way to make it look like an accident. Just by way of example, the middle-aged preppy girl-now-lady had succumbed to a freak accident involving the machine that pumped out tennis balls for practice on the courts at the club. She must’ve gotten distracted, the police said, and the machine’s last hit had been right at her heart, stopping it cold. Bless her heart; she’d always been so graceful on the court, too.

Anyway, that’s the kind of work that kept Tod busy and had done so for a number of years, taking him from those first awful days in 2005 all the way through to these current days more than a dozen years later.

When the call from Whippet comes, his boss-turned-handler sounds aggrieved, his usual disposition these days. For Whippet had succumbed to the same plague that, in his words, had “diluted the quality of everything from music to meatballs”: the buy-out. His upstart business had been spotted by a much larger outfit out of Atlanta working basically the same market, and he’d taken the big payout and rolled his smaller, south Alabama standalone into a conglomerate. Tod had told him it was a mistake; what did people in Georgia know about this business that Whippet did not? But Whippet’d had his head turned by the money and the vague idea that he would retire before 50, living the life on some beachfront property and keeping a place in the mountains in North Carolina so he could see whichever part of the seasons he chose.

Like Tod knew, Whippet couldn’t hang it up. He had nothing else in his life, and without the constant influx of jobs to manage and assets like Tod to wrangle, he’d been bored silly. So, Whippet was back within six months, working as an employee for the new, larger business. It was ok, he’d mused to Tod—all the big management headaches were taken on by others, and he had plenty of money, so he was just working to have something to do.

The killer had never understood this mindset. Tod didn’t understand what was wrong with people these days. Everybody was always retiring and then talking about how they were bored and then coming back and doing the same damn things they’d done for decades. To him, it spoke to both an immense insecurity in people—who ARE we if no one needs us to work?—and a profound lack of curiosity about the wider world. When he, Tod, had enough to retire and see him through whatever elderly ailments his body could possibly present—when he felt secure in the amount of digits in the number he saw when he logged into Fidelity—he was going to walk away, no question. He had a big stack of books and a long queue of movies and shows waiting on him, and he didn’t plan to miss this grind one bit. When he traveled in retirement, he’d make reservations ahead of time in places the guidebooks recommended; he’d stop all this find-an-anonymous-fleabag-motel stuff and travel like a civilized person.

Anyway, Whippet’s major discontent with his new lot had less to do with not liking his work and more to do with feeling like he’d been deceived by the people who bought him out. Said he’d been approached by a big Black dude, a tough guy whose service took place in Vietnam and who still looked like he could break heads using only his own hands, and he’d thought this dude intended to stay in charge. Didn’t know that less than a year after the buyout, the whole business would be turned over to a woman. Nothin’ against women, he said, but still, it didn’t seem right not to have told him, Whippet, the plan.

Now, on the phone, Tod listens patiently through the usual prefaces, tinged with resentments and can-you-believe-this’s that now accompany all his calls with Whippet.

“Well, the lady in charge has sent down the orders for the little people, you and me,” Whippet begins. “You ready for this bullshit?”

Tod mentally sighs and wishes Whippet had stayed retired.

“Yep. Let’s have it.”

“Now, I’m sure she knows what she’s doing, and I would never presume to question the boss lady,” he continues. “I mean, what do I know? I only got an MBA and years of experience doing this while she was probably watching soaps and shopping online.”

Whippet had completed his MBA online with the GI bill a couple of years ago, and he never fails to bring it up at least once in every conversation now.

“But anyway, the target is maybe a little more visible than usual.”

Here Tod’s ears perk up. For all his whining, Whippet does know the business, and when he’s on point, he gets more understated. So “maybe a little more visible” is important.

“The guy’s name is Guy. No shit, couldn’t make that up,” Whippet chuckles. “But you maybe seen his name already on your way into town.”

Tod reaches back to the recent memory of approaching this small town, thinking through billboards, road signs, stretches of road named after local celebrities, until it comes to him.

“The mayor? That Guy?”

“That’s the one,” Whippet sighs heavily. “The fuckin’ mayor. Runnin’ for re-election. Should be out and about a lot at least. County fairs, Rotary Club meetings, that kind of bullshit.

“But there’ll be people around him, Tod. Hangers on and such. So it’s a tricky one.”

That’s definitely an understatement. Even if Tod can isolate a local politician in the midst of an election season, nothing that happens to the man will go unnoticed. His death will be all over the local papers and probably get picked up statewide.

“Damn.”

“That’s right, bud,” Whippet commiserates.

“There a good reason?”

One of the things that Whippet always insisted on—his “defining difference,” as he put it, for marketing’s sake—was the requirement that the buyer provide a motive. Didn’t have to be a good motive or even a particularly strong one. They just needed to know why, exactly, someone wanted this person dead. Gave them leverage over the client, hedged against a future guilty conscience in the form of anonymous calls to police that would expose their organization, and, most crucially, helped Tod and those like him figure out a way to off the person most subtly. Think of it this way: if the person who puts down the money hates a woman because of how she acts at work, then killing her far away from work, in location and manner of death, will be safest to protect them all. So, this was Whippet’s one requirement when he sold the business: at least for his guys, the motive requirement stays in place. To his surprise, the larger organization liked the idea and adopted in for all the contracts.

“Yeah,” Whippet murmurs. “Yeah, there is.”

A recorded voice comes over the line. It’s a woman’s voice, low and choked off, like she can barely get the words out. 

“My husband is an angry man,” the voice begins. “He’s angry at the world, but he wants the world to love him, so all his anger is reserved for his family.

“It used to be just me, and I thought I could handle it. Calling me names in that low, hissing voice that no one else could hear, telling me I was fat, useless, ridiculous in whatever clothes I had one—it was bad but bearable. I married him when I was right out of college and just wanted to get out from under my parents. I figured his behavior was the price I would pay for being careless, for jumping without really looking, and it wasn’t so bad, really. We’ve got a nice house, plenty of money, and everyone thinks we’re a perfect family.

“I thought I’d kept most of it from my kids until the night he locked me outside, naked, and I had to knock on my daughter’s window after he went to sleep so I could come back inside. She was ten, then, and I tried to tell her it wasn’t a big deal, that Mommy and Daddy had just had an argument and needed to be nicer to each other, but she looked at me with her big eyes, and what I saw there was pity.

“That was five years ago.

“Guy’s been mayor for a few years now, and it’s not a full-time job, so he has to keep working, selling real estate, and it’s a lot. I know it’s a lot. He wants us to have everything, wants everything to look just so, and it’s hard for me to keep everything just so with two teenagers leaving stuff lying all over the place. But, you know, it’s bearable. I know there are other women who have it really bad. Mostly all he ever does to me, other than insult me, is squeeze my upper arms so hard he leaves marks. But I don’t really have good enough arms to wear sleeveless dresses—Guy says my upper arms wiggle like a turkey wattle—so I just cover up the marks and drive on, you know?

“But then I overheard my son talking to his girlfriend on the phone. He was in his room, and I usually can’t hear anything, but he must’ve been upset, because his voice was louder than usual.

“He was telling her how much he hates his dad. How scared he is that he’ll be just like him. How he wishes he could protect me, but he gets pissed because I won’t lift a finger to help myself, and he thinks I must be the weakest person alive. Then he feels guilty, and all he can think is that he just wants to kill his dad.

“I’ve not been a good mother, I know. A good mother could’ve figure out how to keep all this away from my kids, keep their home together better so they wouldn’t know any of this was happening, but I’ve failed them there. They both know all about their dad and me.

“But when my son said he wanted to kill his dad, I almost threw up. Hit me like a punch to the stomach, and I do know what one of those feels like. The reason I got so sick was that I realized that if my son killed his father, I’d just be relieved. But my son’s life would be over, too. I knew, in that moment, that I had to do whatever it took so that my son wouldn’t walk around feeling like he wanted to kill. I want my son to think about leaving for college next year, about meeting new people and not worrying about me, and one of these nights, if he gets upset enough at his dad, I won’t be able to stop him. I’ve never been able to stop any of them from doing whatever they want to do.

“This is the only way I can think of stop the whole thing from happening. This is the only way for me to help my kids. I want someone to kill my husband.”

Tod pauses as he considers. Truth be told, he finds himself thinking this woman is pretty weak, too, letting this go on for years and years, but you know, her heart’s finally in the right place.

Doesn’t change the fact that this’ll be one of the trickiest jobs he’s ever done. A visible target, and him on unfamiliar turf, too.

The killer finishes his call with his handler quickly and gets off the phone to think. How can he accomplish this? A prominent man—the mayor, for God’s sake—in a small town, a town he himself doesn’t know at all. An accident is always the best way to go; an unsolved murder would be disastrous, because though the primary objective would be accomplished, the resulting attention would be unfortunate and might, ultimately, make Tod a liability to his organization, which would prove bad for his own health.

An accident, then. Problems abound. First, there’s the issue of access—how will he get close to this man? And knowledge of his habits, his lifestyle, his routines—this is all foreign territory to Tod, who’s only worked on familiar turf with people he’s known for years and motives that help him construct a plan. This guy—Guy—all Tod knows about him is that he’s an asshole. That hardly narrows down a sensible method of death.

Tod isn’t given to fits of pique or temper tantrums; the killer was always known in his unit as even-keeled, the kind of guy you wanted around when shit started to get real, because he never loses his head. But this assignment is so far afield from his comfort zone and so potentially hazardous that his head is spinning a little. Grabbing the ice bucket, he leaves the room and goes in search of the ice and vending machines. There’s never been any situation that an ice-cold Coke didn’t make at least slightly better, that’s for sure.

The ice machine being located in its usual place by the stairwell and the Coke machine having delivered the goods without eating his change, Tod returns to his room, the can balanced atop the pile of ice in his left hand while he manages the key card with his right. Opening the flimsy door, he stops abruptly at the sight of a woman sitting at the small table in his room. Noting the handgun placed casually beside her neatly folded hands on the table, he’s considering whether to back out or lunge for the weapon when she says, quietly, “C’mon in, Tod. Just here to talk.”

The woman gestures at the seat across from her at the small, round table. Hesitantly, Tod places the ice bucket down, pulls out the ugly brown chair, and sits carefully down. The woman looks at the soda perched on the ice and says, “Grab a few cups, would you? I could use some caffeine, too.”

Tod, not knowing what else to do as he tries to figure out what the hell is going on, walks over the to the bathroom vanity where the obligatory flimsy plastic cups are stacked, each wrapped in shrink wrap. He pulls two apart and brings them back to the table. Placing one in front of the woman, she raises an eyebrow and asks, “You mind?”

She’s clearly not going to engage her hands until she wants to, and there is something in her eyes that tells him he won’t be able to get that pistol in time. He upwraps both cups, fills them to the brim with ice, pops open the can, and pours them each some soda, letting it fizz down and pouring more so that both cups are full.

Placing one in front of her, he sips his own.

“Thanks,” she says. “Glad you like lots of ice. Nothing worse than a restaurant where they bring you a Coke with, like, three cubes of ice floating on top.”

Tod nods in agreement. “I hate that. When there aren’t many cubes, they all seem to melt really fast and—”

“Then you’ve got watery, lukewarm Coke,” the woman finishes, nodding vigorously.

They sip their Cokes in silence, the woman’s eyes never leaving Tod, who finds it difficult to maintain eye contact in the best of situations, which this isn’t. Instead, he looks with great interest at his cup, glancing up occasionally to make eye contact with the woman and then quickly returning to his drink.

The woman is average size, with a compact bearing that reminds Tod of a coiled spring. She’s anywhere between 35 and 55, one of those people whose appearance doesn’t announce their years of life in a loud voice. Her hair is a soft brown, sprinkled throughout with grey and cut in a straight line at line of her chin.

Despite the strangeness of this encounter, Tod finds himself feeling oddly comfortable. The woman is clearly ok with silences, and they sit, companionably enough, for a few minutes.

Finally, the woman speaks.

“Got a tricky one lined up, huh?”

Tod’s confusion shows.

“The mayor. It’s a tricky assignment, no?”

The killer is a man who is rarely surprised. The feeling is unfamiliar, but this day is only getting weirder, right? He may as well roll with it.

“Yeah,” he replies. “Trying to figure out a good approach. Not my typical gig.”

“I know,” the woman says calmly. “I wanted to see if you could handle something a little different.”

This is the woman, then. The mystery woman running the organization that bought out Whippet’s. How she found Tod’s exact location he does not know and won’t waste time asking.

“But I don’t want to leave you floundering,” she continues. “That’s not the point. I came by to help out.”

Tod works alone. That’s been the single best thing about this job—not having to work with other people. The killer always hated group work in school—one kid assuming leadership whether the others wanted them to or not, at least one other doing nothing and acting as a dead weight for the others to carry, the whole thing a joyless slog that resulted in a product owned by no one, loved by no one—and his military experience had been much the same. But this job allows him to work by himself, controlling the steps and assuring the outcomes. This woman, whoever she is, wants to “help”? That’s going to suck. Tod sighs and wishes once more for home.

“Don’t worry, Tod. We’re not going to hold hands, and both our names don’t have to go on the report cover,” the woman says, not meanly. “This is your job. I just have intel.

“The mayor is a hard guy to isolate, but he does like to ride his bike. Has an expensive custom job he rides, wears all the goofy tight clothes—the jersey and the padded shorts and what not—and likes to ride on the back roads here.

“Tries to ride three times a week,” she continues. “Always early in the morning. Tomorrow morning, I believe.”

With that, the woman places a piece of paper on the table. It’s a map of some sort.

“His route,” she states. “Joker maps his routes and tracks his workouts—his peak heart rates and what not—and he’s as predictable as farting when you eat beans.”

Standing up and picking up the gun—not too carefully, not carelessly, the way someone does when they know their weapon as well as their car keys—she moves toward the door. Before opening it, she turns back and says, with the finality of someone walking away, “He always leave at six a.m. Asshole doesn’t like it if his routine gets off in the slightest.”

She’s walking out the door when Tod says, not expecting an answer, “Might if I ask your name?”

The woman grins and instantly looks on the younger side of the supposed range.

“Susie. My name is Susie, Tod. Nice to meet you.”

And with that, she’s gone.

The next morning, Tod plans his route out of town carefully. The back road preferred by Guy, the mayor, really is a winding thing. Tod drives the same couple of miles a few times before he spots Guy coming toward him. He raises his hand in greeting, but the man on the bike ignores him. Once he turns the next corner, the killer quickly turns around, being careful not to slide the car on the narrow shoulder. Seeing the bike ahead of him, the killer speeds, makes contact, and then pulls over, gets out, and checks the pulse. The mayor is dead, so Tod gets back in his car and carefully drives away, the deserted back road looking back at him impassively. As he heads out of town, the killer makes sure to take a route that doesn’t take him past Stanley’s gas station.

He should be home in time for an early lunch. Driving the speed limit, he wonders when and if he might see his new boss again. He’s surprised—again—when the prospect doesn’t sound too bad. Turning his wheels toward Alabama, he selects a podcast, one of those true crime things that really are addictive, and heads for home.


Kay Summers is an emerging fiction author with a 20+ year career in communications. She’s written on behalf of others for so long that she started writing fiction to make sure she still had a voice. She does. 

If you enjoyed this story, you may also enjoy Kay’s story “12 Items or Less” over at The Chamber Magazine. You may also enjoy “The Cambridge Dancer” published here at RFM.

“Baikonur Bitch” Fiction by Roly Andrews

Rural Fiction Magazine: "Baikonur Bitch" Fiction by Roly Andrews

“No, you definitely can’t see the Big Dipper from Dunsandle, but you can see the Southern Cross alright!”

She didn’t acknowledge me, but I knew she’d heard and understood.

I looked down at her again.

“You really are a cutie,” I cooed.

Still no response; her fuscous eyes staring, fixating on the galaxies high above, pure amazement on her face.

I’d only just met her.

I’d just popped out of the Hall to smoke a durry and take a piss. I’d walked around the side of the old wooden building towards the domain behind, peering into the windows as I went by. I’d briefly watched Athol Simmons in the Hall Office, trying his hardest to familiarise himself with Glenys Hollis’s topography. While Athol struggled to unhinge Glenys’s bra, the Kirwee Cooees played their interpretation of Lonnie Donegan’s “Cumberland Gap”. It seemed way too appropriate.

I kept walking, nearly tripping over young Jimmy Karsten, who was on his knees praying to Bacchus. He was retching and heaving up copious quantities of beer and Mrs Stott’s coronation chicken. Too much beer with too much fancy food on top, I reckoned. Dance Hall suppers were an institution invented only for womenfolk, teetotallers, fat bastards, and the young who had far more beer on board than they should. I’d always taken the view that dance Hall suppers were a danger to one’s health. Sav’s bathing in tomato sauce and cheese on toothpicks embedded in oranges were way too fancy; best to bring your own. 

“Better get home, boy,” I growled. “Get some water into you and some sleep. You don’t want your old man seeing you like this. Besides, I can’t see your old man doing the milking in the morning; he’s almost as drunk as you are.”

I walked on; behind me, Jimmy groaned loudly, retched, then heaved again.

After taking my leak and lighting up, I continued my short walk. My ears were ringing. The batting away of Jenny Anderson’s continual affections was becoming irritating and tiring. I’d had enough.

“Come dance with me, Archie . . . promise me at least one dance, Archie, please . . . Archie, would you like to sit with me at supper? I made your favourite curried eggs . . . oh, Archie, you do look so handsome tonight!” 

For fuck’s sake, woman!

Leave me be.

Hadn’t I told her as much a hundred times before?

I know Jenny is lonely. Ever since Ted Cooper rolled his tractor, she’s been like a bitch on heat. I also know four hundred acres are way too much for one woman to manage on her own. Her farm backs onto mine, so I help her out when I can.

I know too, she cries herself to sleep. I hear her sometimes through the still lonely nights—her grief-stricken wails wafting through the macrocarpas and settling softly on my bedroom windowsill. I also know she keeps her backdoor unlocked, hoping a knight in shining armour will stroll through. And, very occasionally, I do just that.

But I’m no knight in shining armour. I’m not there to save or rescue her. I have no interest in absolving her pain or nightmares. I’m just knocking her off; it doesn’t mean I want her, and it certainly doesn’t mean I want to get hitched. She’s pretty enough, but it’s only for fun. I like being single. I like being my own man.

But tonight . . . tonight, she’d taken things way too far.

“Imagine,” she said, “two thousand acres and some sons to look after them, and then us when we get too old!”

Since when did an occasional romp in the sack evolve into a lifetime of toil and complaisance? There’s a big difference between taking her and taking her away. I don’t want a bar of it, and I don’t want a bar of all her fussing and constant need to be taken care of.

For fuck’s sake, woman! I’d had enough, and I told her.

“Jenny,” I said, “look, I’m happy enough ploughing your front paddock, but there’s no way on God’s earth I’ll be planting any swede’s or hitching my tractor to your harvester.”

I stopped twenty yards short of the wobbly bench seat overlooking the reedy duck pond. That’s when I saw a silhouette I didn’t recognise. Sitting by the bench was one of the most beautiful things I’d seen in a long time.

“Hello there,” I whispered, trying not to frighten her.

“Aren’t you lovely?” I muttered to myself through pursed lips, ensuring she couldn’t hear.

She sat aloof, petite and pretty. She held herself proudly; her head was tilted high toward the stars, gazing at the sparkling night sky. Her tight athletic form told me she was strong, independent, and not to be trifled with. I liked that.

I walked toward where she sat, calmly sitting beside her, slowly wrapping my arms around her shoulders. I felt her relax; felt her body weight shift against mine. She was warm and unworried by my attention. I gently stroked her face with the back of my hand. She exposed her graceful neck. I tickled under her chin.

“You really are a beautiful girl,” I sighed.

“You want something to eat? Got some dressed pies in the back of my truck,” I said proudly, “picked ’em up this afternoon. Dunsandle General Store makes the best-dressed pies in the universe.”

I slapped her rump. “Come on, follow me.”

I walked toward my old Nash. It was parked in a sea of gravel and potholes. Under the bright starlight, she stood aloof and proud. She looked like a beached metallic shark, ready to roar into action with a single swish of her rusty tail fins. Yanking open one of her stiff back doors, I reached in and pulled out two cold dressed pies. I held one out—my new friend looked and stole a sniff, then greedily took the pie from my hand, wolfing it down instantly.

“They’re good, aren’t they? Especially the beetroot, eh? Even cold!”

She was ravenous, so I gave her mine as well. Again, she inhaled it.

While she was eating, I studied her form. Petite but muscular, alert and intelligent. Young. Pretty as a picture, obedient and calm. She was a perfect specimen.

“I’m going to have some fun with you,” I muttered a bit too loudly.

“Come,” I said—now walking back toward the Hall.

She followed without question or hesitation.

“Good girl!”

As I approached the Hall, the Kirwee Cooees were murdering Buddy Holly.

His silent screams overpowered by the crackly Gibson amp and pitchy vocals.

Do, do, do, do, well, that’ll be the day.

Please let that be true!

Yeah, yeah, yeah, make me cry.

You’re already breaking my heart and killing my ears. I’m nearly there.

Wop, wop, wop, you gonna leave me.

I will soon mate unless you shut the fuck up.

‘Cause, that’ll be the day-hey-hey when I die.

Now, that would be a blessing.  

Many people don’t know this, but Buddy Holly and his Crickets—in fact, all the crickets within a mile of Dunsandle Memorial Hall—died a gruesome death on the evening of November the 4th, 1957. Artistry and craft crashing to earth in great balls of fire (yes, I know that was Jerry Lee Lewis), butchered, massacred; ashes scattered asunder by the musical inabilities of Kirwee’s best.

As I approached the front of the Hall, I saw Jenny Anderson sitting languidly on the concrete steps. Her legs splayed beneath her yellow circle dress like supper toothpicks protruding from a soft block of cheese. She was bawling her eyes out.

Fuck me, I thought.

A semi-circle of women surrounded her, her tears seemingly draining her strength and form but fortifying those of her companions. Jenny was being comforted and mollycoddled by the Coleman sisters-in-law. Mrs Stott, who would sooner fart in church than miss out on any gossip or drama was also in the thick of it. Even Glenys Hollis was there, making a fuss and rubbing Jenny’s back. I just hoped she had had the time to stuff herself back into her undergarments. God knows anything could pop out when you’re leaning over like that. The women were holding a sacred pow-wow, and I had no reason to think I wasn’t the subject of their distemper.

“You bastard,” Glenys spat as I caught her eye.

“You lousy bastard, I don’t know what Jenny sees in you.”

The Coleman women nodded their heads in agreement. Mrs Stott just stood there, swollen hands resting on ample hips. Five hostile women are five too many for me. I turned quickly and proceeded to go back from whence I came.

“Archie Cleary, stop right there!” Mrs Stott ordered.

I froze. The only thing bigger and scarier than Mrs Stott in these parts was her temper.

“Who’s that bitch belong to?” she demanded, her hand extended, index finger pointing and waving.

“Don’t know,” I answered honestly. “I found her; I’m gonna take her home. Gonna train her up—trial her. I reckon she’d make a mighty fine sheepdog.”

“You can’t go around picking up random strays and taking them home, Archie Cleary. She doesn’t belong to you.”

“She doesn’t belong to anyone,” I shot back, “she’s not from these parts, never seen the like of her before. She’s a beauty, though, smart too! For all I know, she might have come from outta space. She’s like-a angel from heaven.”

“Don’t be daft. You leave that dog be. How do you know she wants to go with you? Come here, sweetie,” Mrs Stott called, slapping her pudding-like hands on her jellied thighs.

Without hesitation or thought, my newfound fickle friend trotted off. She sniffed Mrs Stott’s hands, no doubt the scent of coronation chicken still lingering deep within their pores. Then she sat next to Jenny Anderson and started licking the tears and hair from her ruddy face. Jenny wrapped her arm around the dog.

“Jesus,” I exclaimed, walking toward the steps to grab the dog by its scruff. As I approached, the dog bared its teeth, snarled, and growled, her body language telling me, come any closer mate, and I’ll have your guts for garters.

I stepped back—six sets of eyes drilling into me. No one spoke. It was a Selwyn stand-off. There could only be one loser, who was likely to be me. Eventually, I retreated. There was nothing to be gained in staying.

As I pulled the Nash out of the car park, I looked back into the rear vision mirror. Jenny Anderson wasn’t crying anymore. She was rubbing the belly of her newfound companion, who was lolling around her feet, tongue hanging out. I smiled a half-smile. Jenny had at last found her knight in shining armour. I might have broken her heart but a four-legged stranger had started to mend it.

Half a mile down the road, I came across Jimmy Karsten stumbling home. He had seven miles to go, and his one step forward and two to the side were never gonna help the cows get milked in the morning. I pulled over. “Jump in,” I said, “I’ll take you home.”

After dropping him off, I turned on the radio. The NZBC news at midnight came on. The headline story was about the Russians launching another satellite. And even more incredible than that, they had put a dog inside the satellite! One of the first living creatures in space.

Well, fancy that! I thought—fancy that.


Roly Andrews lives in Nelson, NZ; in his spare time, he enjoys tramping. After many years of practising, he is still trying to learn to play the trombone! A champion for everyone, he has mentored rough sleepers and supported people affected by suicide. He advocates for the rights of people living with disabilities. Your Site ‹ Roly Andrews – Story Teller — WordPress.com


If you enjoyed this story, you might also enjoy “Passing Through Jenkins Thicket” by Edward N. McConnell.

If you like stories with a dark edge to them, check out The Chamber Magazine.

“Pay at the Pump” Fiction by Kay Summers

"Pay at the Pump" Dark Fiction by Kay Summers for Rural Fiction Magazine

The killer pulled into the gas station slowly, tires crunching over the loose gravel dotting the asphalt. The station was small, one of those old stations right outside small towns where the prices are posted on signs with numbers someone changes by hand. It sported two pumps of an elderly vintage, and when the killer pulled alongside the first one, he saw the paper, handwritten sign taped over the handle: “Out of Order.” Sighing inwardly, he pulled ten feet forward to access the second pump. A similarly scrawled sign taped over the credit card slot read: “Pay Inside.”

With another sigh, this one audible, the kind that fills a given space with the weary frustration of its owner, he put the car into park, popped the gas tank open, and turned off the engine. The killer preferred to pay at the pump rather than walking inside ahead of time, waiting on whatever patron was buying scratch-off tickets and beef jerky, and then estimating how much he’d need to fill his tank. It was an inexact science at best, and it’d inevitably leave him with a gas gauge hovering just below the full line, as unsatisfying ending to a gas transaction if ever there was one.

He’d never understood people who said things like, “I’m just going to get five dollars of gas,” or shit like that. How could you possibly keep track of your fuel with a gauge that was forever short of full, never stopping at the top, just floating somewhere between half and three-quarters of a tank?

The door to the store was glass with one of those metal handlebars bisecting it. The kind that leaked heat in the winter and AC in the summer, which wasn’t the killer’s problem, but he did ponder the wasted money and energy for a second. The door swung easily, and the small bell hanging from a string on the inside tinkled to announce his entrance.

The clerk was seated behind the counter. This station was small, of course, and in one of those towns that liked to think it had low crime, so there was no glass barrier protecting the employee. More likely than a low crime rate was the chance that there was a shotgun underneath the counter, just by the man’s knees, providing assurance as he read the newspaper, drank coffee, and conducted the odd transaction or two that probably occurred no more than twice an hour; three times, tops.

Peering over his paper, the heavyset man, dressed in blue work chinos and a striped, short-sleeved button-up with his name stitched on the pocket—Stanley, it said—sighed as well, folding his paper carefully and setting it on the counter before regarding the killer over the bridge of his reading glasses.

“Fill ‘er up?” The man asked.

So, he wouldn’t have to guess how much to pay. That was a plus. He nodded, and the man pushed a few buttons on the console to his left, nodding back at the killer and grunting, “Go ’head, then.”

The killer didn’t know gas stations still existed where a person would be trusted to come back in and pay after filling up the tank. But apparently, here in the wilds of Georgia, they did.

Post fill-up, the clerk—Stanley—was friendlier. “That a hybrid?” he asked with genuine interest. “How many miles you get?”

Twenty years ago, the version of this man would’ve no doubt viewed such a car with suspicion, but now, with gas prices spiking, everybody and their grandma was interested in hybrids—what kinds of batteries they took, whether or not it had any pick-up, if he’d ever topped 50 miles per gallon, you name it.

“Averages about 45 on the highway,” the killer replied. “More than 38 in town.”

“That right? That’s the opposite of what you read about them,” Stanley quizzed.

“Yeah, I know,” the killer answered. “They got it all backwards, at least with mine.”

Stanley had a few more questions, and the killer, whose name was Tod, pronounced Todd but with just the one “d,” indulged him. Tod normally hated small talk—not because of his profession, though. He’d always been bad at it, not like those kids who could chatter away to a stranger in the aisle of a grocery store, telling some stranger all their momma’s business while she stood further down the aisle, trying to remember if they needed Pop-tarts or not. Tod had been the kid who stood, mutely, while some random adult asked random questions about what grade he was in and did he like his teacher and what not.

But in a strange town, with a job to do, it paid to be a little friendly, because in the South, you stood out more if you weren’t. He was known to be quiet in his own hometown down by the Gulf in Alabama, but here, he was more likely to be remembered if he didn’t converse than if he did.

Also, it was possible Stanley could help him.

After it was clear that Stanley’s curiosity about current hybrid technology had been sated, and he began to pick up his paper again, Tod ventured, casually: “Got any motels close by around here? I’ve got a long drive tomorrow, and I’d love to rest up, watch a little TV, catch a few zzz’s.”

Stanley, he knew, was likely to recommend the kind of place he was unlikely to find on hotels.com—a one-story motel with doors that opened right to your parking spot and clerks who didn’t mind taking cash with no reservation. Stanley did not disappoint, directing him to a homely establishment just about two miles down the same state highway and on the right. The Olde Towne Motel, it was called, and Tod knew the stylish nature of the extra “e’s” wouldn’t be reflected in the accommodations, but that was more than fine. Places like this catered to people who maintained a very small footprint in this world, whether they stayed a night or lived here, and they were unlikely to notice him or care if they did. They all had more than enough worries to occupy their time.

The room was gross, of course, but Tod had stayed in many worse places while in the military. A place that had a bed, even if he needed to don a Haz-Mat suit before lying on it, was superior in every way to a dugout in the mountainous desert or a back room in some shot-up house in Baghdad.

There was an flat-screen TV, the free-standing kind that you could get on the after-Thanksgiving Day sales at Wal-Mart if you were ready to take your life in your hands and do battle with all the heavyset ladies, Black and white, who’d crowd into surging hordes of shoppers against the closed doors, sprinting—their big chests heaving and bouncing—as they grabbed shopping carts and ran like hell for the electronics section as soon as the floodgates opened. It was scarcely bigger than the flat-screen monitor the killer used in his workstation back at his house, and the color on it was flat, garish, home-video quality circa 2006, making everything he tried to watch look like an episode of “Cops.”

Passing time in places like this required patience, and Tod had that in abundance. He was waiting on a call from his handler, Whippet, a man he knew from their mutual time in the military. Whippet was the guy who’d hooked him up with this gig, in those first disorienting, lonely days after he returned from his final combat tour with too much time on his hands and too much stored-up adrenaline and banked hypervigilance to enjoy it. Whippet had started his own business, helping people rid themselves of troublesome neighbors, acquaintances, and the occasional husband, when he returned, and his recruitment pitch to Tod had been simple: “Hey, man. Remember how they kept calling us ‘trained killers’ and all that bullshit? Well, I say stick with what you’re good at. Fuck trying to make it in the straight world. They trained us, and fairly expensively, wouldn’t you say? Might as well use it.”

And it had been, in the end, that simple. There was no shortage of small-town people with petty grudges they’d been carrying around for years. Being able to unburden oneself from, say, the anger one might feel at the snooty prep who’d called you fat in junior high, then grown up and married some Tuscaloosa business school graduate with a beer gut who golfed, an ever-present dumbass visor on his head, and moved to his wife’s town to open his own investment business, keeping selfsame preppy girl in Vineyard Vines and Lilly Pulitzer shifts until the end of time, was an appealing prospect for some. All Tod had to do was the take the contract from Whippet and figure out a way to make it look like an accident. Just by way of example, the middle-aged preppy girl-now-lady had succumbed to a freak accident involving the machine that pumped out tennis balls for practice on the courts at the club. She must’ve gotten distracted, the police said, and the machine’s last hit had been right at her heart, stopping it cold. Bless her heart; she’d always been so graceful on the court, too.

Anyway, that’s the kind of work that kept Tod busy and had done so for a number of years, taking him from those first awful days in 2005 all the way through to these current days more than a dozen years later.

When the call from Whippet comes, his boss-turned-handler sounds aggrieved, his usual disposition these days. For Whippet had succumbed to the same plague that, in his words, had “diluted the quality of everything from music to meatballs”: the buy-out. His upstart business had been spotted by a much larger outfit out of Atlanta working basically the same market, and he’d taken the big payout and rolled his smaller, south Alabama standalone into a conglomerate. Tod had told him it was a mistake; what did people in Georgia know about this business that Whippet did not? But Whippet’d had his head turned by the money and the vague idea that he would retire before 50, living the life on some beachfront property and keeping a place in the mountains in North Carolina so he could see whichever part of the seasons he chose.

Like Tod knew, Whippet couldn’t hang it up. He had nothing else in his life, and without the constant influx of jobs to manage and assets like Tod to wrangle, he’d been bored silly. So, Whippet was back within six months, working as an employee for the new, larger business. It was ok, he’d mused to Tod—all the big management headaches were taken on by others, and he had plenty of money, so he was just working to have something to do.

The killer had never understood this mindset. Tod didn’t understand what was wrong with people these days. Everybody was always retiring and then talking about how they were bored and then coming back and doing the same damn things they’d done for decades. To him, it spoke to both an immense insecurity in people—who ARE we if no one needs us to work?—and a profound lack of curiosity about the wider world. When he, Tod, had enough to retire and see him through whatever elderly ailments his body could possibly present—when he felt secure in the amount of digits in the number he saw when he logged into Fidelity—he was going to walk away, no question. He had a big stack of books and a long queue of movies and shows waiting on him, and he didn’t plan to miss this grind one bit. When he traveled in retirement, he’d make reservations ahead of time in places the guidebooks recommended; he’d stop all this find-an-anonymous-fleabag-motel stuff and travel like a civilized person.

Anyway, Whippet’s major discontent with his new lot had less to do with not liking his work and more to do with feeling like he’d been deceived by the people who bought him out. Said he’d been approached by a big Black dude, a tough guy whose service took place in Vietnam and who still looked like he could break heads using only his own hands, and he’d thought this dude intended to stay in charge. Didn’t know that less than a year after the buyout, the whole business would be turned over to a woman. Nothin’ against women, he said, but still, it didn’t seem right not to have told him, Whippet, the plan.

Now, on the phone, Tod listens patiently through the usual prefaces, tinged with resentments and can-you-believe-this’s that now accompany all his calls with Whippet.

“Well, the lady in charge has sent down the orders for the little people, you and me,” Whippet begins. “You ready for this bullshit?”

Tod mentally sighs and wishes Whippet had stayed retired.

“Yep. Let’s have it.”

“Now, I’m sure she knows what she’s doing, and I would never presume to question the boss lady,” he continues. “I mean, what do I know? I only got an MBA and years of experience doing this while she was probably watching soaps and shopping online.”

Whippet had completed his MBA online with the GI bill a couple of years ago, and he never fails to bring it up at least once in every conversation now.

“But anyway, the target is maybe a little more visible than usual.”

Here Tod’s ears perk up. For all his whining, Whippet does know the business, and when he’s on point, he gets more understated. So “maybe a little more visible” is important.

“The guy’s name is Guy. No shit, couldn’t make that up,” Whippet chuckles. “But you maybe seen his name already on your way into town.”

Tod reaches back to the recent memory of approaching this small town, thinking through billboards, road signs, stretches of road named after local celebrities, until it comes to him.

“The mayor? That Guy?”

“That’s the one,” Whippet sighs heavily. “The fuckin’ mayor. Runnin’ for re-election. Should be out and about a lot at least. County fairs, Rotary Club meetings, that kind of bullshit.

“But there’ll be people around him, Tod. Hangers on and such. So it’s a tricky one.”

That’s definitely an understatement. Even if Tod can isolate a local politician in the midst of an election season, nothing that happens to the man will go unnoticed. His death will be all over the local papers and probably get picked up statewide.

“Damn.”

“That’s right, bud,” Whippet commiserates.

“There a good reason?”

One of the things that Whippet always insisted on—his “defining difference,” as he put it, for marketing’s sake—was the requirement that the buyer provide a motive. Didn’t have to be a good motive or even a particularly strong one. They just needed to know why, exactly, someone wanted this person dead. Gave them leverage over the client, hedged against a future guilty conscience in the form of anonymous calls to police that would expose their organization, and, most crucially, helped Tod and those like him figure out a way to off the person most subtly. Think of it this way: if the person who puts down the money hates a woman because of how she acts at work, then killing her far away from work, in location and manner of death, will be safest to protect them all. So, this was Whippet’s one requirement when he sold the business: at least for his guys, the motive requirement stays in place. To his surprise, the larger organization liked the idea and adopted in for all the contracts.

“Yeah,” Whippet murmurs. “Yeah, there is.”

A recorded voice comes over the line. It’s a woman’s voice, low and choked off, like she can barely get the words out. 

“My husband is an angry man,” the voice begins. “He’s angry at the world, but he wants the world to love him, so all his anger is reserved for his family.

“It used to be just me, and I thought I could handle it. Calling me names in that low, hissing voice that no one else could hear, telling me I was fat, useless, ridiculous in whatever clothes I had one—it was bad but bearable. I married him when I was right out of college and just wanted to get out from under my parents. I figured his behavior was the price I would pay for being careless, for jumping without really looking, and it wasn’t so bad, really. We’ve got a nice house, plenty of money, and everyone thinks we’re a perfect family.

“I thought I’d kept most of it from my kids until the night he locked me outside, naked, and I had to knock on my daughter’s window after he went to sleep so I could come back inside. She was ten, then, and I tried to tell her it wasn’t a big deal, that Mommy and Daddy had just had an argument and needed to be nicer to each other, but she looked at me with her big eyes, and what I saw there was pity.

“That was five years ago.

“Guy’s been mayor for a few years now, and it’s not a full-time job, so he has to keep working, selling real estate, and it’s a lot. I know it’s a lot. He wants us to have everything, wants everything to look just so, and it’s hard for me to keep everything just so with two teenagers leaving stuff lying all over the place. But, you know, it’s bearable. I know there are other women who have it really bad. Mostly all he ever does to me, other than insult me, is squeeze my upper arms so hard he leaves marks. But I don’t really have good enough arms to wear sleeveless dresses—Guy says my upper arms wiggle like a turkey wattle—so I just cover up the marks and drive on, you know?

“But then I overheard my son talking to his girlfriend on the phone. He was in his room, and I usually can’t hear anything, but he must’ve been upset, because his voice was louder than usual.

“He was telling her how much he hates his dad. How scared he is that he’ll be just like him. How he wishes he could protect me, but he gets pissed because I won’t lift a finger to help myself, and he thinks I must be the weakest person alive. Then he feels guilty, and all he can think is that he just wants to kill his dad.

“I’ve not been a good mother, I know. A good mother could’ve figure out how to keep all this away from my kids, keep their home together better so they wouldn’t know any of this was happening, but I’ve failed them there. They both know all about their dad and me.

“But when my son said he wanted to kill his dad, I almost threw up. Hit me like a punch to the stomach, and I do know what one of those feels like. The reason I got so sick was that I realized that if my son killed his father, I’d just be relieved. But my son’s life would be over, too. I knew, in that moment, that I had to do whatever it took so that my son wouldn’t walk around feeling like he wanted to kill. I want my son to think about leaving for college next year, about meeting new people and not worrying about me, and one of these nights, if he gets upset enough at his dad, I won’t be able to stop him. I’ve never been able to stop any of them from doing whatever they want to do.

“This is the only way I can think of stop the whole thing from happening. This is the only way for me to help my kids. I want someone to kill my husband.”

Tod pauses as he considers. Truth be told, he finds himself thinking this woman is pretty weak, too, letting this go on for years and years, but you know, her heart’s finally in the right place.

Doesn’t change the fact that this’ll be one of the trickiest jobs he’s ever done. A visible target, and him on unfamiliar turf, too.

The killer finishes his call with his handler quickly and gets off the phone to think. How can he accomplish this? A prominent man—the mayor, for God’s sake—in a small town, a town he himself doesn’t know at all. An accident is always the best way to go; an unsolved murder would be disastrous, because though the primary objective would be accomplished, the resulting attention would be unfortunate and might, ultimately, make Tod a liability to his organization, which would prove bad for his own health.

An accident, then. Problems abound. First, there’s the issue of access—how will he get close to this man? And knowledge of his habits, his lifestyle, his routines—this is all foreign territory to Tod, who’s only worked on familiar turf with people he’s known for years and motives that help him construct a plan. This guy—Guy—all Tod knows about him is that he’s an asshole. That hardly narrows down a sensible method of death.

Tod isn’t given to fits of pique or temper tantrums; the killer was always known in his unit as even-keeled, the kind of guy you wanted around when shit started to get real, because he never loses his head. But this assignment is so far afield from his comfort zone and so potentially hazardous that his head is spinning a little. Grabbing the ice bucket, he leaves the room and goes in search of the ice and vending machines. There’s never been any situation that an ice-cold Coke didn’t make at least slightly better, that’s for sure.

The ice machine being located in its usual place by the stairwell and the Coke machine having delivered the goods without eating his change, Tod returns to his room, the can balanced atop the pile of ice in his left hand while he manages the key card with his right. Opening the flimsy door, he stops abruptly at the sight of a woman sitting at the small table in his room. Noting the handgun placed casually beside her neatly folded hands on the table, he’s considering whether to back out or lunge for the weapon when she says, quietly, “C’mon in, Tod. Just here to talk.”

The woman gestures at the seat across from her at the small, round table. Hesitantly, Tod places the ice bucket down, pulls out the ugly brown chair, and sits carefully down. The woman looks at the soda perched on the ice and says, “Grab a few cups, would you? I could use some caffeine, too.”

Tod, not knowing what else to do as he tries to figure out what the hell is going on, walks over the to the bathroom vanity where the obligatory flimsy plastic cups are stacked, each wrapped in shrink wrap. He pulls two apart and brings them back to the table. Placing one in front of the woman, she raises an eyebrow and asks, “You mind?”

She’s clearly not going to engage her hands until she wants to, and there is something in her eyes that tells him he won’t be able to get that pistol in time. He upwraps both cups, fills them to the brim with ice, pops open the can, and pours them each some soda, letting it fizz down and pouring more so that both cups are full.

Placing one in front of her, he sips his own.

“Thanks,” she says. “Glad you like lots of ice. Nothing worse than a restaurant where they bring you a Coke with, like, three cubes of ice floating on top.”

Tod nods in agreement. “I hate that. When there aren’t many cubes, they all seem to melt really fast and—”

“Then you’ve got watery, lukewarm Coke,” the woman finishes, nodding vigorously.

They sip their Cokes in silence, the woman’s eyes never leaving Tod, who finds it difficult to maintain eye contact in the best of situations, which this isn’t. Instead, he looks with great interest at his cup, glancing up occasionally to make eye contact with the woman and then quickly returning to his drink.

The woman is average size, with a compact bearing that reminds Tod of a coiled spring. She’s anywhere between 35 and 55, one of those people whose appearance doesn’t announce their years of life in a loud voice. Her hair is a soft brown, sprinkled throughout with grey and cut in a straight line at line of her chin.

Despite the strangeness of this encounter, Tod finds himself feeling oddly comfortable. The woman is clearly ok with silences, and they sit, companionably enough, for a few minutes.

Finally, the woman speaks.

“Got a tricky one lined up, huh?”

Tod’s confusion shows.

“The mayor. It’s a tricky assignment, no?”

The killer is a man who is rarely surprised. The feeling is unfamiliar, but this day is only getting weirder, right? He may as well roll with it.

“Yeah,” he replies. “Trying to figure out a good approach. Not my typical gig.”

“I know,” the woman says calmly. “I wanted to see if you could handle something a little different.”

This is the woman, then. The mystery woman running the organization that bought out Whippet’s. How she found Tod’s exact location he does not know and won’t waste time asking.

“But I don’t want to leave you floundering,” she continues. “That’s not the point. I came by to help out.”

Tod works alone. That’s been the single best thing about this job—not having to work with other people. The killer always hated group work in school—one kid assuming leadership whether the others wanted them to or not, at least one other doing nothing and acting as a dead weight for the others to carry, the whole thing a joyless slog that resulted in a product owned by no one, loved by no one—and his military experience had been much the same. But this job allows him to work by himself, controlling the steps and assuring the outcomes. This woman, whoever she is, wants to “help”? That’s going to suck. Tod sighs and wishes once more for home.

“Don’t worry, Tod. We’re not going to hold hands, and both our names don’t have to go on the report cover,” the woman says, not meanly. “This is your job. I just have intel.

“The mayor is a hard guy to isolate, but he does like to ride his bike. Has an expensive custom job he rides, wears all the goofy tight clothes—the jersey and the padded shorts and what not—and likes to ride on the back roads here.

“Tries to ride three times a week,” she continues. “Always early in the morning. Tomorrow morning, I believe.”

With that, the woman places a piece of paper on the table. It’s a map of some sort.

“His route,” she states. “Joker maps his routes and tracks his workouts—his peak heart rates and what not—and he’s as predictable as farting when you eat beans.”

Standing up and picking up the gun—not too carefully, not carelessly, the way someone does when they know their weapon as well as their car keys—she moves toward the door. Before opening it, she turns back and says, with the finality of someone walking away, “He always leave at six a.m. Asshole doesn’t like it if his routine gets off in the slightest.”

She’s walking out the door when Tod says, not expecting an answer, “Might if I ask your name?”

The woman grins and instantly looks on the younger side of the supposed range.

“Susie. My name is Susie, Tod. Nice to meet you.”

And with that, she’s gone.

The next morning, Tod plans his route out of town carefully. The back road preferred by Guy, the mayor, really is a winding thing. Tod drives the same couple of miles a few times before he spots Guy coming toward him. He raises his hand in greeting, but the man on the bike ignores him. Once he turns the next corner, the killer quickly turns around, being careful not to slide the car on the narrow shoulder. Seeing the bike ahead of him, the killer speeds, makes contact, and then pulls over, gets out, and checks the pulse. The mayor is dead, so Tod gets back in his car and carefully drives away, the deserted back road looking back at him impassively. As he heads out of town, the killer makes sure to take a route that doesn’t take him past Stanley’s gas station.

He should be home in time for an early lunch. Driving the speed limit, he wonders when and if he might see his new boss again. He’s surprised—again—when the prospect doesn’t sound too bad. Turning his wheels toward Alabama, he selects a podcast, one of those true crime things that really are addictive, and heads for home.


Kay Summers is an emerging fiction author with a 20+ year career in communications. She’s written on behalf of others for so long that she started writing fiction to make sure she still had a voice. She does. 

If you enjoyed this story, you may also enjoy Kay’s story “12 Items or Less” over at The Chamber Magazine. You may also enjoy “The Cambridge Dancer” published here at RFM.