David Tallerman - Stockholm Syndrome
One of them, I called him Billy-he was more, what’d you call it? More
animated than the rest. Mostly they just wander about. Occasionally
they’ll pick things up and then get bored and put them down and go back to
wandering again. They don’t make much noise. I guess they know that there’re
people around, for a few days at the start they bashed at the boards up over
the windows and tried to push against the doors. They can’t climb and they
ain’t got much in the way of strength, so eventually they gave that up. And
after that they just shambled about, or sometimes just lay there.
It’s funny how sometimes they look like people and sometimes they don’t.
The first ones, the ones who came up out of the ground or wherever they
were, guess what you’d call the first generation-some of them are pretty
normal looking. But the way they walk, that lumbering, slowly like they’re
taking baby-steps and watching their feet all the time, that’s what makes
them so different. Course, the other ones, the ones that the first
generation got to, some of those are real messed up: bits hanging off and
big messy wounds, sometimes their faces are half off. They’re just like dead
people who’re up and walking about. They’re easier to deal with I guess,
even though it’s pretty crazy to see them like that. But at least you know
where you stand.
So anyway, I was talking about Billy. Billy, he was first generation
through and through. I don’t know what his story was, but when he turned up
about two weeks ago he was wearing a suit, a real nice suit, he even still
had a carnation in his buttonhole. I don’t know, maybe they was burying him
when it happened. You’ve got to wonder what they’d have thought, when they
was burying him and he got up like that.
Anyway, he cut quite a figure when he walked up of Main Street in that
suit. Well, not walked, y’know, I guess he shambled as much as the rest of
them, but somehow he seemed kind of smarter than the others-more alert. And
in that suit, he reminded me of my kid, when we buried him. That’s why I
named him Billy.
Billy made himself at home pretty quick. It didn’t take him long to
figure that there were just two houses with people in, mine and the place
over the road. Both of us had boarded ourselves in pretty good. Actually, I
shouldn’t go taking the credit for that-when I got here, after my car came
off the freeway a couple of miles up, I found this place pretty much like it
is now. They’d got in through a window and it was still left open-a couple
of them had got in and then I figure the other two must’ve been the ones
whose house it was. Four’s about as many as you could handle, up close like
that-I had my old revolver still on me. I guess I was lucky though, getting
them before they got me. Guess it could have easily gone the other way.
I hauled the bodies out the window and boarded it up again before the
others figured out what’d gone on. All in all, I was real lucky-there was a
rifle here with one of those telescopic sights, and a whole load of tins,
all sorts of things. They was all set to wait it out, and then they just
must have got careless. It can happen. It ain’t easy to keep concentrating
all the time, not with things the way they are. I’ve tried not to mess with
their property too much-it wouldn’t be decent. That gun and the food’s all I
really need.
But, I’m getting off the subject again-this is Billy’s story, it ain’t
mine. And the thing was, as soon as he’d walked into town like that, you
could see that something was different. I guess I should have known that he
meant trouble, but you get bored, with nothing to do all day and the radio
and TV giving out nothing but static. I should have just shot him right
then. At first, y’know, you take every shot you can get-but after a while
you get to realising that there’s always gonna be more of them than you got
bullets. However many bullets you got there’ll always be more of them.
So, maybe that’s what I was thinking when I didn’t take my shot on
Billy. Or maybe it was because he’d looked so much like my kid when he was
walking up Main Street. Or maybe it was just that I was bored and here was
something happening. I suppose it don’t matter much.
Either way, you could see that he was a bit smarter, that he wasn’t just
gonna settle down to blundering about with the rest of them. First off, he
walked all round the house across the road, and every so often he’d bang on
a board or something, like he was testing the place. Then, when he got done
with that, he came and did the same to mine-I could hear him scratching on
that window where I’d got in. I got to say, I was impressed. You get sick of
the stupid way they act, they’re like dumb, lazy children, and it starts to
grate on your nerves after a while. It was nice to see one of them showing a
bit of initiative; even if it did look like it was gonna spell trouble.
I wasn’t too worried for myself-I checked the boards every morning, and
every so often I’d hammer up another couple, more for something to do than
anything, ‘cause like I said they’d pretty much given up on trying to get
in. But I didn’t know about the family across the road; I didn’t know
whether they were taking precautions or not. The place looked okay from the
outside. Sounds kind of stupid now, but I didn’t like to pry too much. I
knew that there were four of them, I figured they were a husband and wife
and two kids, but that was as far as I’d got. It’s a wide street, I couldn’t
see much without the sight, and that just felt too much like-I don’t
know-like I was some kind of pervert. Even with everything all screwed up
like this, people have got to have some right to privacy, haven’t they?
There wasn’t any way we could talk to each other, if the phones had been
working then I could have just looked them up in the book I guess. Or maybe
I could’ve put a sign up, but I didn’t know if they’d have any way to read
it. So, I just tried to leave them alone as much as I could.
Billy obviously got it into his head that they were a better bet,
because after the first day he didn’t bother with me too much. But I kept my
eye on him, ‘cause he was interesting-least he was compared with the others,
and because they were everywhere, as far as you could see, they were about
all there was to look at. It was the same for them, they were curious, as
much as they could be-who was this, walking around like he had some kind of
an agenda or something?
In the meanwhile, Billy had taken a project on himself-the second day
after he walked into town, he picked himself out a particular window, round
on the right hand side of the family’s house, just after where the porch
ended. Even with the scope, I could barely make him out there. There was the
porch, and a big old tree in the way, and I could just about see him moving
around but that was it. ‘Course, I could guess what he’d be up to-he must
have decided that there was a weak spot, he thought maybe if he kept going
at it he’d be able to get in sooner or later. I didn’t give much for his
chances. There was no way they wouldn’t have heard him there, and if they
thought there was any chance of him getting through they’d be hammering up
two new boards for every one he managed to get off-least, that was what I’d
of been doing.
Probably he’d get bored after a day or two, and go to sitting and
wandering like the rest of them. That thought made me kind of sad, somehow.
I mean God knows it wasn’t like I wanted him to succeed or nothing-I just
didn’t want to have to watch him give up either. Shit, I don’t know, maybe
it was like I wanted to see him make something of himself; I didn’t want him
to wind up like my Billy did. Yeah, it sounds pretty stupid, I know that. I
guess I don’t know what I was thinking-just seemed like it would of been a
shame is all.
When I got up the next day, he was still at it. But it wasn’t just
that-he’d gathered himself an audience as well. A lot of the others-maybe
there was a hundred, maybe even more-had gathered about on the lawn. Some of
them were standing but a lot were just sitting around, like he was putting
on a performance for them or something. I still couldn’t make out exactly
what Billy himself was up to. It got to be frustrating-what could he be
doing to get all of their attentions like that? After a while I started
hunting around for a better view, and then I remembered there was a ladder
to the attic, and sure enough once I got up there, there was a big window
looking out over the street. The room had been converted, looked like it was
a kid’s room but then the kid had left and the parents hadn’t wanted to
change it any.
The window was so big that I could sit up on the ledge. And from there,
sure enough, I could see Billy pretty clear. It was quite a shock. I ain’t
ever seen one of them go at anything the way he was at those planks-tearing
at them with his hands, over and over. His fingers were all bloody, with the
sight I reckoned I could make out bits of bone where he’d torn the ends
clean off. He was a mess, but that wasn’t slowing him any-I guess he wasn’t
even feeling it. He just kept tearing at the planks, not paying any
attention to anything else. He’d got a couple down already; they were lying
on the grass next to him. I didn’t figure it was gonna do him any good
though-the family would put up more on the inside, and if he started on
those they’d just have to put up some more. Even if he was a bit stronger
and a bit smarter than the rest, he still wasn’t about to keep up.
Still, the way he was going at it, it was hard to take your eyes off.
Apart from a break at lunchtime I watched Billy all day, ‘til it started to
get too dark. The last I saw, he was about half way there on the outside
planks. He was still at it when I left him-I suppose the dark didn’t bother
him too much.
I got up early the next day, and shifted all my supplies up into the
attic room, along with a gas stove I’d found. It was like he’d become the
centre of my life all of a sudden-I remember thinking how I was just like
those other dumb bastards who were sitting out there on the lawn with him,
watching him like he was the star attraction in a freak show.
Only, when I got up to my perch on the sill, they weren’t sitting any
more. They were in a big mass now, with Billy right there in the centre in
that nice suit of his, and every single one of them was after getting into
that window. Maybe twenty of them were clawing at the planks, all together,
and I could tell straight away that whatever the family were doing on the
inside there wasn’t anything that could stop that-the sheer weight of all
those bodies all together.
Sure enough, it was only about a minute after I got up there that the
whole thing caved in, planks and bodies all falling in together-I remember
some crazy part of my brain thinking, it was like Billy had been waiting for
me, as if he liked that he’d got an audience.
I didn’t do anything, what would’ve been the point? If the family had
been on the other side, and I figured they must’ve been, then they’d have
been dead about the moment those planks gave up. I wasn’t feeling much
either-like maybe I was in shock. They kept on climbing through the window,
all of them, fighting each other to get in like it was the only thing that’d
ever mattered to them. Even once the room was full they kept on going, ‘til
there were just a few left on the lawn, and even they were still pushing and
shoving.
It was quiet, a weird kind of quiet considering what’d just happened,
but I didn’t even notice it until the screaming started. And then it seemed
strange there being a noise, ‘cause I’d gotten so used to it being quiet all
the time. I had to put down the rifle for a second, just so I could look to
see where it was coming from. It was up on the second floor, on the far side
from where they’d got in-the little daughter, maybe she was about twelve
years old. They must’ve locked her in there, thinking she’d be safer maybe.
She was hanging half out of the window, and she was screaming-she wasn’t
looking at me, I don’t know if she knew I was there, if she was screaming
for somebody to help her or just screaming. There wasn’t a thing that I
could’ve done for her. If she’d gotten out onto the porch and down to the
road, maybe then I could’ve done something, but there was no way to tell her
that. I picked up the rifle again, I don’t know why, whether I was thinking
to get some of them before they got to her, or whether I thought I’d make it
easier on her. That’s what I should’ve done, I guess-I don’t know if I even
thought of it then, it’s a hard thing to think.
And, y’know, I think I’d guessed that it was going to be Billy that got
to her first, least I wasn’t a bit surprised when he appeared. The girl
didn’t even realise he was there she was so caught up with her screaming. It
was a long double window, and there were a couple of feet between them
still. Billy was shuffling up like he had all the time in the world, and I
had a good clean shot, would have taken his head right off.
I squeezed on the trigger-and then I stopped. All I could think about
was how I’d been happier since Billy had walked up of Main Street, about how
much he’d looked like my kid. Maybe he was one of them but he was smart, and
did I have the right to kill him? And somewhere, there was a voice in my
head saying, you can’t get them all, there just ain’t the bullets, one of
them’s going to get her and why shouldn’t it be Billy? I knew that I was
wrong-if I could buy her a bit more time then maybe she’d wake up and get
out onto the porch.
I went to take the shot again. But by then, it was too late.
Billy lurched forward, and he got hold of her head with those bloody
stumps of hands that he had left, and he bit down hard into her cheek. Then
he just stayed like that, with his mouth covering half of her face-almost
like he was kissing her except for the blood streaming down between them,
pouring out all over his nice suit. I could see his jaw moving through the
sight. Suddenly, he didn’t look like my kid no more; he just looked like a
monster. I pulled the trigger-and for a couple of seconds his head was just
a red cloud, with the blood raining down over everything. When it cleared he
was still standing there, and even though there wasn’t anything to hold it
up his face was still clamped over hers. I pulled the trigger again, and
then they both crumpled down. I knew she was dead any way, but that didn’t
make it feel any better.
So, that’s the end of Billy’s story. And I guess it’s the end of mine as
well. Yesterday, I found this old tape recorder, and I just wanted to talk
it all through I suppose, get it out in the open. Probably no one’s ever
going to hear it. But maybe there’ll be a day when this is all over, and
maybe there’s something we could learn from it. Maybe everyone will try to
forget as quick as they can when they’d be better off remembering. ‘Cause,
what I’ve been thinking is, the worst thing that they’ve done to us, it
ain’t killing us. It’s making us like them-making us so we can’t feel
anything. Whether they get to you or not, you start to getting a little less
human every day, you get deader inside.
Or, I don’t know, maybe I was always like this. I haven’t ever cried for
Barbara and my little girl, not once, even though I miss them so bad it
hurts-something in me just can’t do it. But then, I didn’t cry for Billy
either-seeing them put him in the ground I was just angry, and wondering why
he had to do a stupid, selfish thing like that. Shit, I know I wasn’t a good
father to him, but if he’d just talked to me then there’s got to have been
something I could’ve said.
But I guess that I understand Billy a little better now-I wish he was
here and I could tell him that, instead of talking to this dumb machine. One
of the policemen said to me, Billy didn’t really know what he was doing,
‘cause nobody shoots themselves in the chest-in the mouth he said, with the
barrel facing upwards, that’s the best way.
It’d be hell to do with that rifle, but I was lucky, there’re a couple
of bullets left in the revolver-and I’ll only need the one.
I guess what I was trying to say before, what they’ve taught us-it’s
that being alive ain’t the same thing as living. And me, I figure that I’m
already dead.
At least now I’ll get to stay that way.
THE END