Another story from my work in progress sci-fi/horror collection, Nobody Is Special is obviously inspired by current events, to the point where there's certainly nothing speculative about a society descending into fascism. Hey, poke your heads outside every once in a while, everybody! Life has always been a struggle, and it's never over until you give up. There's plenty left fighting for. Just remember that this country, despite its many atrocities and crimes, was founded as a democratic republic with humanist ideals. America has done some wonderful things, from joining the Allies in World War 2 to putting a man on the moon, and we can do good again. We just have to remember who we are and that the current administration is about as far away from the American ideal as possible.
...
The comedian took the stage to
lackluster applause. He had curly hair and a big nose and wore a blue
blazer that was noticeably faded in the bright lights. Before he
spoke, he removed a note from his pocket and stared at it for a
moment, as though he didn’t recognize his words, before tossing it
to the ground with a nonchalance that belied the almost imperceptible
tremor in his hands.
“Hey, how you
all doing tonight?” he asked the crowd. “Boy, the Gestapo is out
in force. Sometimes I wonder what they look like under those
skull-like masks. Are they good-looking? Is a Brad Pitt look-alike
under there? Is Ben Affleck’s twin busting my nuts? You’d never
know because they never take the masks off. What do you think that
signifies? What do you think that means?”
“What if I got
up here in a doomsday helmet and told jokes? It wouldn’t work,
would it? It would be too humanizing. You’d know that under that
monstrous mask, there was a real person with a real sense of humor.
We don’t know if a random Gestapo agent looks like a movie star or
Cleetus Diabeetus, but I’ll tell you what, I’d bet on the
latter!”
The crowd
murmured with a few uneasy laughs sprinkled about.
“You know what
kind of fucking losers work for the Freedom and Pacification Force?
Dumb fucking hillbillies! The kind of people to whom you ask a
question and they answer with duh-huur?
You know why they never read
you your rights? It's because they can’t read!”
Two
armored FPF agents had materialized behind the back of the crowd.
They started walking toward the stage, truncheons drawn.
“You
know, we used to have freedom of speech in this country. A person
could say whatever they wanted, especially a comedian. Telling the
truth was our societal function. Now they drag you offstage to beat
the hell out of you for calling a pig a pig!”
Both
agents had hopped onto the stage, shiny black helmets gleaming in the
strong light. The comedian
turned toward them with a sneer.
“Oh
what the fuck you gonna do, big man? You gonna beat me in front of
all these fucking people, you fucking cousin fuck…”
The
truncheon slammed into his big nose with an audible crack, and the
comedian fell to his knees, blood spraying across the stage. A gasp
went through the crowd before it grew silence. The agents dragged him
off the stage and behind the curtain, and the promoter ran out to
apologize, sweat glittering on his forehead.
“It’s
over, folks, the show’s canceled tonight. I’m sorry, we’ll
offer refunds at the door! Please exit in an orderly fashion. This
will all be over soon! Goodnight!”
The
crowd did as they were told, but there were a few lingering stares,
for in the quiet shuffling of feet moving, you could hear the blows
raining down upon the comedian, falling like heavy rain behind the
curtain.
…
“Quite
the show, eh?” said Jeff to his friends.
They
sat around a circular table, cards in hand, three
middle-aged men and one woman
drinking beer in-between bets. They were in a smoky basement room
adorned with sports memorabilia and a two mounted deer heads. Old
honky-tonk played on a stereo softly while a basketball game
progressed on a muted television that they all ignored.
“He
had it coming to him,” said Diego, a brown-skinned man with
close-cropped hair. “Everybody knows you can’t say shit like
that.”
“Why
not?” asked Wilhelm, whose long blond hair was fleck with gray. “In
Germany we can tell jokes about the police.”
“Well
in America, you fuck around and you find out,” explained Ashley,
winking across the table at her boyfriend Diego. “We don’t put up
with agitators and terrorists.”
“How
was the man committing terrorism by poking fun at the FPF?” asked
Wilhelm.
“He
was calling them Gestapo and hillbillies!” replied Diego. “These
men put their lives on the line every day, rounding up undesirables
and degenerates! If they didn’t do their jobs, we’d be mobbed by
the homeless and the Anti-Fascist
radicals!”
“In
an ostensibly free country, you should be able to speak your mind
without fear of government retribution,” opined Wilhelm.
“That’s
socialist propaganda,” dismissed Ashley, taking a swig of her beer.
“Can
you explain what you mean by that?” asked Wilhelm.
“Can
you guys stop talking politics all the time?” asked Jeff. He had
dark skin and a bald pate and a thick, woolly mustache.
“Jeff’s
what they call an enlightened centrist,”
said Diego.
“I
am not! I don’t pay attention to that shit. Both parties are the
same,” explained Jeff.
“Surely
you don’t mean that,” said Wilhelm. “The Progressives never
implemented anything like the FPF when they ran the country.”
“No,
what they did instead was jack up inflation so high that you couldn’t
afford groceries or gas and then implement polices in schools to turn
the kids gay and teach them to hate themselves for being white,”
said Ashley.
“Do
you believe this?” Wilhelm asked Diego.
“All
I know is that I don’t like women telling me what to do,” said
Diego, smiling at Ashley.
“You’re
an asshole, you know that?” she told him.
“Sure,
but I’m your asshole,” replied Diego.
“Play
a hand, play a hand,” said Jeff. He showed his cards and won with aces high.
Suddenly
there was a loud knocking on the door.
“Who
the fuck is that this time of night?” asked Jeff, getting up from
his seat.
“Probably
some freeloader looking for a
handout,” said Diego.
“Jesus,
Diego,” said Ashley, laughing. “It’s probably a neighbor.”
Jeff
opened the door to reveal an FPF officer standing before him. He had
on a thick black uniform with an armored torso and knee pads, and his
right hand dangled above his side arm as though ready
to
duel. His encompassing helmet had empty obsidian eyes and a circular
respirator that amplified his breathing. The black combat boots
raised his height considerably so that he towered over Jeff, who was
not a tall man. There was no badge or number on his breast or sleeve;
FPF officers were free of identifying insignia, so that they could
perform their function anonymously.
“Is
this your house, citizen?” he demanded in an
electronically-distorted voice.
“What’s
this about?” asked Jeff.
“I
asked you a goddamn question,” said the officer, who put his left
palm on Jeff’s chest and shoved. Jeff stumbled backward and fell to
the floor.
“Hey,
what the hell?” yelled Ashley, getting to her feet.
The
FPF officer pivoted toward her and drew his pistol.
“Stand
down! On your fucking knees!”
“Oh
my god!” screamed Ashley, falling down with her hands behind her
head.
In
the doorway a flying saucer about two feet in diameter hovered, red
lights dancing across its surface. It aimed a white light at Jeff,
and then Ashley, until it stopped on Diego and began to strobe.
“That’s
him,” said the FPF officer. “You there, brown man. You’re under
arrest for illegal
immigration. Walk in front of
me with your hands up.”
“What the hell, man! I’m
a goddamn veteran!” said Diego, who had his hands up.
“I’m
not going to tell you again, motherfucker,” said the FPF officer,
aiming his weapon. “The AI doesn’t make mistakes.”
“Well
it sure as hell does if it thinks I’m an illegal immigrant! I’m a
former Marine, asshole…”
The
gun fired, deafening in the small garage, and Diego slumped to the
floor with a hole in his skull. Ashley screamed and the FPF officer
turned his weapon toward her.
“Shut
up, you stupid bitch, or I’ll blow your goddamn head off!”
Suddenly
the flying saucer’s light cease its strobe effect, and turned
toward Wilhelm, who was staring at Diego’s corpse in wide-eyed
shock.
“Wait
a minute,” said the FPF officer. “You’re the illegal, aren’t
you?”
“I
forgot to renew my visa,” said Wilhelm, his voice stammering.
“Oh
my god, oh my god, oh my god!” babbled Ashley, who had begun to
crawl toward Diego.
“I
thought you said it didn’t make mistakes!” said Jeff.
“I…”
murmured the FPF officer before falling silent.
“You
killed him! You killed him! You murderer!” cried Ashley, her hands
covered in blood as she cradled Diego’s head.
“Shouldn’t
you call an ambulance?” asked Wilhelm.
“He
shouldn’t… he shouldn’t have resisted,” said the FPF officer
finally.
“He
did nothing of the sort! He was complying! You shot him for nothing!”
accused Jeff.
“He
was a domestic terrorist,” replied the FPF officer, his voice
regaining its hostile confidence. “He should’ve done what he was
told to without question. You fuck around and you find out. You!
Illegal! Come with me outside.”
Wilhelm
quietly followed the FPF officer outside. Jeff and Ashley remained
where they were until they heard a car door slam shut followed by the
squeal of tires as the FPF officer’s vehicle burned rubber.
…
Across
the street, two neighbors watched as an ambulance carted off the body
of Diego Sanchez.
“Christ
almighty, what is this country coming to?” asked Ernest, a heavyset
man in his late forties.
“They’re
making it right,” replied Andrea, a bleached blonde older woman
with a cigarette in her hand.
“The
FPF? They just shot one of our neighbors and abducted another,”
said Ernest incredulously.
“They
already uploaded the video to the internet,” replied Andrea. “Here,
watch it. You can see that the Latino didn’t do as he was told.”
“Look,
I support the Freedom and Pacification Force as much as the next guy,
but there was no reason for the officer to shoot Diego! He had the
wrong guy!”
“You
do what you’re told when a federal agent points a gun at you,”
said Andrea, taking a quick drag on her cigarette.
“You’d
let them drag off your own mother, wouldn’t you?” accused Ernest.
“You
bet I would. You know she has it coming. I’m going back inside.”
Ernest
was left alone in the now-quiet neighborhood, a look of disbelief
lingering on his face.