I awoke this morning with an idea for a short story, and this is what I have so far. I think it is time to start working on another compilation of stories and poems. Enjoy the start of The Jaws of Life.
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As I stood before those masticating jaws, I suddenly knew that I
couldn’t do it.
“I can’t,” I
said to the gate agent.
“Excuse me?” he
asked. He wore a red jacket with a little mouth pin speared through
the lapel.
“I can’t walk
inside that mouth, and let that thing eat me.”
“Uhhh,” said
the gate agent. His toupee reminded me of a snake trying to swallow
an egg.
I looked around for
my clothes and saw them in a black garbage bag in the waiting area,
so I started walking toward them.
“Wait, what are
you doing? He is expecting someone! You’ve been prepared!”
My skin was
saturated with butter, and black pepper fell from my graying locks.
“I just can’t,”
I said. Part of me wanted to apologize, but I couldn’t. Not with
those peg-like teeth and that giant tongue still visible beyond the
threshold.
“What am I
supposed to say to Him? They’ll make me talk to him, you know! I’ll
be the poor sap that has to give an explanation! Look out there! Look
at him! Does He look like something you’d want to climb up on a
giant escalator and shout inside the ear of? Because that’s my day
now, buddy. All thanks to you.”
I looked outside
the window and saw Him sitting there, cross-legged on the tarmac,
giant hands resting folded in his lap.
“I’m sorry. I
can tell them that it isn’t your fault.”
“Of course it’s
not! It’s yours! What you can do, buddy, is get back over here and
climb past the threshold, and start your journey to the Great Beyond,
like every other sixty-year old man! You think you’re the first
person to have reservations about climbing inside of a giant mouth?
It’s what we do, though, alright? It’s part of the deal we struck
with the Gods. It’s the only way to the Great Beyond. You want to
see your wife, right? Your parents? All your deceased loved ones?
Then stop chickening out and get the fuck over here!”
All while he spoke,
his volume had crescendoed from a whisper to a shout. I went over to
the bag and put my clothes on, ignoring how the greasy butter made me
feel. I knew that part of my hesitation was due to the fact that my
system had always resisted the effects of hallucinaginc drugs. Yet
who could die this way? Years of propaganda tried to prepare the mind
for this gruesome end. However, the sight of that open maw quivering
with anticipation filled my mind with more fear than I could even
contemplate.
“I’m going
home,” I told the gate agent.
He threw up his
hands and shook his head, the toupee threatening to come loose from
his skull.
“No one will pick
you up from here. This is supposed to be a one way ticket. And you
have to wear this now. No buts.”
With one quick
motion, he slapped a sticker directly on the center of my forehead. I
knew what it said.
Heretic.