I wrote this the other night, trying to write something more realistic than I usually do, something without violence or 'action.' I don't think it's a bad character piece, but my biggest complaint is that the story doesn't really GO anywhere.
Anyway, I thought I would share it here, with all of you, warts and all.
The long
dusty road seemed to stretch out forever before Abigail Hunter. The summer sun
beat down on her thin, white hair but its heat didn't reach Abigail's bones.
She pulled her sweater tighter around her thin shoulders, adjusted the canvas
bag hanging over her back, and concentrated on putting one foot in front of
another.
Cherokee was at least two hours away by foot,
and that was if she had stuck to the main roads. Taking these backroads,
frequently crossing through pine forest, using the sun to guide her, was only
adding more time to the journey.
Abigail
had passed a few rural homes, eyed cars parked in dusty drives and in concrete
carparks, but she had resisted the urge to check for keys. The police would
already be looking for her. Why take unnecessary risks?
She'd
taken a big enough risk filching a change of clothes from a wash line. If the
laundress had come out and caught her, Abigail didn't like to think about what
she'd have had to do. Thankfully, that
hadn't happened. She'd grabbed the clothes - ragged jeans and a weatherworn
cotton shirt - stuffed them in the canvas garbage bag she'd walked off with,
and walked into the nearest woods.
The
house she'd stolen the clothes from had been isolated and there hadn't been any
sign of a car, but the theft had set Abigail's heart to pounding in her chest.
Adrenaline had surged through her veins, just like it had in the old days, and
her hands had shook with excitement.
There had been no fear.
Abigail
had changed clothes in the woods. She'd kept the crap shoes the prison had
given her, although she swore if she found a decent pair of shoes just lying
around, she'd take them at the first opportunity. She'd kept the underwear too,
and her sweater, but she'd shucked out of the Day-Glo orange shirt and pants
and stuffed them beneath a blackberry bush.
For a
minute, she'd stood in the forest, the clear sky above her, blue as a robin's
egg, the sun beating down, bright and hot. She'd felt as if she was reborn.
Then she'd pulled on her stolen clothes and walked deeper into the woods.
As
Abigail walked through the pines, she upended the canvas garbage sack they'd
given her when they'd put her on trash detail. She had thought about throwing the
sack away, but a good sack could be useful. Stuff it full of paper or leaves
and it could be a pillow. Fill it with rocks and you could bludgeon somebody to
death with it. So, she kept the sack.
She
trudged on, putting one foot in front of the other. She left the forest and
found herself on a back road. The road was old and cracked, filled with pot
holes. It didn't look like it had been maintained in a long while and Abigail
took that as a good sign.
Not many
folks lived in this part of the county. The land was mostly pine forest with
the occasional old house every few miles. Most of the houses weren't in any
better shape than the road, and some were in worse. She passed one old house,
sagging and dark, slowly being devoured by kudzu, that pernicious vine that
Abigail's father had hated with a passion.
Abigail
didn't like to think about her father. It put her in a bad mood. Made her feel
all tight and queer inside, like a jack-in-the-box with a broken spring. There
hadn't been much love between Abigail and her father, even before she had left
home. Afterwards, whatever soft sentiments she'd had toward the man had
evaporated.
A few
years ago, the prison chaplain had asked to speak with Abigail. When she was
sitting in his office, the chaplain had told her that her father had died.
Passed on, as the chaplain had put it. Abigail had thought the expression made
her father sound like a kidney stone and, behind her eyes, she had chuckled at
the thought.
The chaplain
had asked her if she wanted to talk. Abigail had said no, and she had gone back
to work in the laundry. Afterwards, stuffing wet sheets into the big industrial
dryers, Abigail had regretted not talking to the chaplain. It would have gotten her out of work for at least
a couple of hours. Maybe the rest of the
afternoon if she could have mustered up some crocodile tears.
The sky
was darkening now, clouds drifting across the sun's face and a chill wind
blowing from the east. That wind smelt
wet and Abigail didn't look forward to the thought of walking in a downpour.
The
first cold drop of rain hitting her face made her shudder. She stepped off the
road, back into the pine forest, looking for a tree to shelter under.
The sky
was black now, filled with rain clouds. The few errant raindrops was turning
into a steady curtain of cold water. Abigail
swore as she huddled beneath a tree. Lightning flashed and thunder rumbled.
She
abandoned the tree and resumed walking, shoulders hunched against the rain and
the wind. Unexpectedly, she came across
the ruins of a mobile home, abandoned in an overgrown lot, just off the worn
road.
The door
was open. The interior was dark and smelt of mold, but it had a roof that would
keep the rain off of her. Abigail stepped inside and sat down on mouldering
shag carpeting. Lightning flashed, briefly illuminating the interior of the
trailer. It was a deceptively big space with a few old bean bag chairs kicked
into one corner. The light gleamed off of empty beer cans and an abandoned box
of condoms.
High
school kids, thought Abigail. Probably used this place to party on the
weekends, back in the day.
The rain
pounded on the ceiling so loudly Abigail could hardly hear herself think. She
stood and wandered around the trailer. In the tiny kitchen, she rattled empty
drawers and opened dusty cabinets. She found a box of matches and thrust it
into her pocket.
Part of
the trailer's flooring had collapsed at the far end, where the bedrooms and
bathroom had been. She didn't want to risk falling through the floor, or
twisting an ankle, so Abigail returned to the front door. She sat and watched
the rain fall in thick gray sheets. It didn't look like it would let up any
time soon. Setteling in, to wait out the storm, she wondered where the police
were looking for her.
Abigail
knew she wasn't the only prisoner who had made a break for it when Fat Albert,
their guard, had collapsed by the roadside.
She had seen a couple of the younger women high tail it down the road,
as she stepped into the pine woods. Some of the other prisoners, the
short-timers mostly, had clustered around the fallen man. Maybe they thought if
they helped him, they'd get sprung early. That wasn't an option for Abigail.
The
police would probably go after the younger women first. They'd probably think
they were more dangerous. Probably.
But they
were stupid. If they had vanished into the trees, like Abigail had, their
escapes might have lasted longer. But three women running down the side of the
road in Day-Glo orange prison work suits? They were probably already back in
jail.
Which
meant that the police would be focusing their attention on finding Abigail.
They were probably underestimating her. After all, she was close to sixty years
old. The cops probably thought she was a frail old lady. And, true, Abigail
might not have been as strong as she was in her youth, but she was tough as old
shoe leather. You couldn't last in the box if you weren't tough.
Abigail
estimated that she'd probably covered about twenty miles before the rain had
started. Even if the cops had brought in tracker dogs, her meanderings through
the woods, along the edge of back yards and across highways and streams, would
make tracking her harder. The rain would be a big help, washing away her scent.
All she
had to do now was be smart. Avoid unnecessary risks until she reached Cherokee.
There was a train yard in Cherokee. If she was careful, she could hop a freight
train and put more distance between herself and the prison. And the longer she
was free, the better her chances of getting away and not dying inside that damned
box.
At some
point during the storm, Abigail drifted into sleep, lulled by the drumming of
the rain on the roof. When the rain stopped, the sudden silence woke her. She
blinked, stared out the trailer's door, at a damp, moonlit world. She had no
idea how long she had been asleep or what time it was. Her body was stiff and
ached from the day's exertions, but Abigail ignored the small aches and
pains. She stood, stiffly, and stepped
out of the trailer.
Cherokee
was still a ways away, and traveling by night was no more dangerous to her than
traveling by day. Slinging her canvas bag over her shoulder, Abigail resumed
her journey westward by moonlight.
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