has been shattered." The barely-a-man stood there bereft.
In front of the rawhide door'd wigwam was clothing ripped to shreds.
"Dogs?" Asked a woman Marshal.
"Some were chased by dogs, yes," told a male co-worker. "But the dogs were all different. Like they'd gotten away from their masters and packed up."
"Do dogs do that?" A woman looked through binoculars in a 360. She lowered them revealing mesmerizing green eyes and said, "I'm a cat person."
"What in the tarnation is going on down there?" A radio asked.
"That's the General."
"The units have scattered."
"Everyone was supposed to have been making way North. And now this shit." A late twenty-something Officer, faced smeared with paint and tactical pants with a leg ripped almost off, pushed his mushroom hair towards the back of his head.
"Oh no." She held the satphone device away from an ear as a man kept bellowing. "I don't think it would be helpful at all," she talked to the air around the device. Snapped it back into it's carrying cradle and straightened her back. "He's coming back down." She looked at the ground and said.
He drove up in a spitshone lavender colored classic pick up truck. Oh man. That's embarassing. Guys mumbled on the horn. "It's my wife's!" The burly man bellowed. Then he pulled and pulled at the seat belt jammed into a rigged-with-a-lock seat belt click it. A Correspondent took a picture of a redfaced and spitting man not struggling and not swearing, but repeating, "It's my wife's!" He withdrew a stout knife from his utility belt and cut the seatbelt. Lifted the door handle and the door didn't open. He jammed his shoulder over and over against the door. His satphone device vibrated. He answered, "I'm getting there Sir or M'am," and hung up. A magazine Editor grabbed a walkie talkie, ducked behind a rock, and taunted, "Try unlocking it."
When the man did get out, he took off his utility belt and left it on the front seat. People spewed bits of information at him as he made way towards one of mine. He stripped out his greens, out of his whites, and approached the young man buck neked. "What's going on son?" The boy was staring at the lake in the distance.
There was no actual lake there but some visiting pastors had reinvigorated the churches with pastors away on missions in the all-night fire and brimstone way, see, and the THOU SHALT NOT KILLS and the "counting on y'all to have my backs" were twisting the young man's mind into frozen.
No lie, right about that time a gaggle of women folk came lightly marching up to the trailhead. All knee socks and grandmother's very hiking boots, the wife of the neked man yelled out Honey. What in the hell?! He didn't turn towards her but waved his hand back off, back off. She stopped short of proceeding and got poked in the butt by a fishing pole. The snowblind man in hip waders called out a shorry.
Through the woods in a kind of reverse echo came the summer's familiar cry: TIMBER, TIMBER, TIMBER, TIMBER, TIMBER
TIMBER!!!!
"That sounded close," a campcook with a big pot told a greenjacket named Granny. "Should I be scared yet?" The sound of a chainsaw and group chant of PUSH, PUSH, PUSH mustah collided in the action because it was way less than thirty seconds before a leafy tree top whooshed in a resounding and bouncing crash. Nobody flinched except for Granny who sucked in his scared in a backwards stifled scream and wound a ladle and wooden spatula up in the front part of his just bathed towel. The cook turned to look at him. And snortily growled, "Whadyadoinatfer?"
"Ready to run. You think I should run?"
"Nowin'llhaftawashthose good."
Dirt and gravel and leaves and twigs rushed from the felled giant as gator-clads and jumpsuited heavy chain carriers single-filed past headed towards road.
"Cun'tthinkno boozechet."
"Somebody needs to look at a map!" A snooty-sounding man with a pipe clenched between his teeth and trying to button his longcoat over sidearms strapped to thighs couldn't really order. "But that won't really shut him up. Watch."
"Okay I will but is this the training?"
A little car with two doors different colors than the body came from the direction of where the chain carriers went. It didn't look like there was a driver. But there was a very large, muscled black man in a Garrison cap and tan short sleeve shirt in the passenger seat. A tiny, wizened-looking woman got out of the car by pushing the driver's seat forward. This honked the horn by squishing a kid's face against the steering wheel. The little old lady opened the passenger side door and grabbed the ear of the big man. Twisted, hard, and pulled him out of the vehicle. He stooped so it would hurt less. She dragged him over to the woman in the hiking boots. "ARE THESE YOUR MEN?" She demanded to know.
A woman with an eyebrow penciled moustache behind the waders laid her hobo kerchief on a stick down on the ground. She put hands on hips after rolling up the sleeves of the old tuxedo blazer and sung out, I just might be m'am. Not exactly sure if this there is there yet or where we are exactly. She scrunched one eye and looked at the hand drawing blood from the man's ear and right into the woman's eyes, "What if'n Iyam?"
The little bitty woman looked up and spit at an angle on the ground. "ASK!" She barked at the man in the bear trap grip. The man tried to turn to face the hobo but blood spurted out on the tiny woman's face. Above the baca stains at the corners of her mouth. "I'm, ma, I'ma s'posed sposed to ask why the units broke up suhm'am."
"Let go of this man's ear," the hobo took the slightest upper body step forward. The woman spit at an angle closer to just in front. But she did. The man in uniform stood up straight and tall and brought heels into a tap and square and saluted in the direction of no one. "You were hurting him. And your hand is dirty."
The saluting man stayed saluting. The kid in the driver's seat got out and unlocked the trunk. Put a hand out to help a slightly taller kid with similar hair twists in rows onto the ground. The taller one walked over to the hobo and curtsied the sundress over jeans. "You newspaper?" The hobo looked around as if in a dream. "I may be," she said. The kid put hands on hips like the hobo. The hobo crossed arms. The kid crossed arms. Then they had a staring contest.
The shorter kid locked everything on the car and put the keys down the front of also rolled up jeans. Walked over. Observed the staring for four long missussippis then snapped fingers in between. "You first!" The taller kid said. Hobo mimed was so happy, then night, sleeping, woke up, looking, looking, sad. The shorter kid stood on tip toes and patted the hobo's shoulder. Hobo signed a thank you. The taller kid blared headline and lead...
"We here 'cuz his cousin [head shove at saluting man] come from bottomland and tole."
The hobo knelt on one knee and put a hand out like wanting a biscuit. "What'd she tell?" She just more than whispered. The kid put both hands on the hobo's shoulders. "Steady youself." The hobo nodded yes. Yes I will. "They's was coming up, all dem."
"What happened?"
"Cousins getting to Georgia to come back, tole."
"Grapevine?"
The kid nodded hesitantly. "Dogs and poeleese and chain gang." Kid looked at the barefeet on the ground. "I didn't even see that there'ses gravel here."
"What else grape?" The hobo asked on both knees then.
"Pretend I'm a leaf. A big leaf covering up alls mine."
"I will, but what else. What did the cousins say?"
The kids face turned to stone. Then remembering. Then fought through scared shakes and blurted, "Theys hanging 'em in trees a, ah, again." The child tried to push away a wave of tremors running from knees suddenly knocking together and running in place at the same time. The wave pushed passed hands pressing away and clutched at chest, then throat, running, face making every emotion. The child collapsed into a seizure. The hobo straightened the legs and arms and yelled BRING MY BAG.