Zach ([info]smilingbeef) wrote,
@ 2008-04-29 00:40:00
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Local Hero (a short short story)

All  I could do was wonder if I was going to be on the news for this.  One minute I’m going through a bag of trail mix, picking out the chocolate chips, waiting in line to deposit a hundred thirty dollars in birthday checks.  I’m noticing the guy in front of me is sweaty in spite of the cold, mildewed air in this bank that time forgot, where all the tellers have retired twice already and the faux wood is chipped off the corners of the particle board counter-tops.  I’m thinking what a lousy life it must be, being a guy who sweats so much.  And then he falls over.

            Next minute I’m straddling him like it’s prom night pressing rhythmically on his chest.  He’s not so fat that my knees don’t touch the ground, but I’m still thinking it’s his fault as I notice the way the fat under his chin pools and reverberates my efforts back at me.  His lips are like sausages, and as I breathe into his mouth I hear the calls of “Faggot!  Faggot!” from the stupider kids in the life-saving course.  When the reporter sticks her microphone in my face, I see them in their living rooms saying it still, but knowing in their hearts that I’d just made something of myself.

            “It was instinct,” I’m saying to a woman in a blue blazer, her wrinkles hidden by pancake makeup.  “I took the course for extra credit my senior year, and it just kind of came back to me.”  My palms press into his chest.  My checks have fluttered to the ground around me.  The one from grandma.  The one from Aunt Lisa.  I worry about them being stolen for a second, but the crowd around me just stares.  I go in again to breathe into his mouth, my fingers gently closing his nostrils, and then I’m back at the compressions. 

I realize I probably should be next to him, not straddling him.  I realize that I’m pressing harder than I should and not counting.  I don’t tell this to the reporter.  I smile at her with my aw shucks ma’am heroism.  I consider shouting for help, but there are cell phones in hand already.  I say “Come on” between grunts, heightening the drama for the crowd and maybe for the emergency dispatch if they can hear me.  The reporter has her microphone in my face, so my every exhalation and soft curse can be heard by the whole metro area at five, six, and ten.  I hope my mom is listening, grandma, Aunt Lisa.  They’ll buy a dozen copies of tomorrow’s paper.  I’ll show it to my children.

But this guy isn’t cooperating, and I start to hate his limp face.  I blow extra hard into his mouth, and the reporter says, “Even in moments of quiet desperation, our local hero maintains his composure.”  I tell her that I do my best.  I start to count compressions.  I stop long enough to read my watch without trying to appear like I stopped.  Of course, I don’t know how long it’s been.  Is he brain dead?  Press. Press.  Breathe.  Is he going to fucking thank me after this?    Press.  Press. Press.  Come on, dummy.  The reporter’s face has fallen, cracking her makeup and her painted-on smile in a dozen places or more.  I keep pressing.

I keep pressing.

A man in a red windbreaker taps me on the shoulder and I move away.  They don’t pronounce him dead here, because that’s too much paperwork for them.  They take him to the hospital.  The reporter looks into the camera and says nothing.  The camera light goes off.  They pack up and go home.

 




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[info]radanax
2008-04-29 06:16 am UTC (link)
Yikes. An allegory?

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[info]smilingbeef
2008-04-29 06:20 am UTC (link)
I don't think so! What's your take on it?

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[info]radanax
2008-04-29 06:47 am UTC (link)
It seemed like a piece on the inescapability of exposure and the imposition of how actions make you appear to others in front of the actions themselves. Like, y'know how this current generation has been demonized for protesting with blogs and youtube videos instead of moving on Washington, fighting our dissatisfactions as individuals rather than banding together publicly? I can almost see the dying man as the old world order in that regard, and this 'local hero' fellow is almost an everyman.
Does that make any sense?

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[info]smilingbeef
2008-04-29 06:51 am UTC (link)
yeah, it does. It's always so odd to see something get interpreted. I mostly intended it as a story of a man who wants acceptance from society and is denied it. But then, that's why the author is dead.

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[info]radanax
2008-04-29 06:57 am UTC (link)
'the author is dead'? Is that some literary theory truism?

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[info]smilingbeef
2008-04-29 06:59 am UTC (link)
Barthes said it, so it has to be true! ;)

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[info]soft_ascent
2008-04-29 06:27 am UTC (link)
I have dreams like this all the time. I know exactly what that feels like and it ain't good.

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(Anonymous)
2008-05-01 01:42 am UTC (link)
this is just...wow. The imagery is intense; I linked here from "Animals Have Problems Too" and this is the first thing I read -- I am definitely hooked. I understand what you talked about, as a shy artist myself, in terms of why you're on hiatus. But there's a whole new understanding after seeing the kinds of things you have moved on to. It's wonderful that you are moving upward and onward, into new and better things. I wish you the best on your novel and everything else you continue to create. I will certainly be excitedly watching out for it.

-Jess

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